Yes, the word 'dough' is a word for a soft mass of moistened flour or meal thick enough to knead or roll; a word for a thing.
Yes, "dough" is a noun. It refers to a mixture of flour, water, and other ingredients used to make bread or pastry.
The homonym for "dough" is "do."
The homophone of dough is doe.
I am making pizza dough from scratch for dinner tonight.
The word "crisp" can be both an adjective and a noun. As an adjective, it describes something firm and dry. As a noun, it refers to a thin, flat food made by baking a batter or dough mixture.
The homophone of "doe" is "dough."
Dough is a noun.
The adjective form is "doughy." But note that this has another meaning besides "dough-like in appearance or texture." The adjective doughy can also mean similarly pallid and flabby. In Australian slang, it means that someone is slow to understand, or dense.
There is no adjective for the noun biscuit. The noun is often used as a noun adjunct (e.g. biscuit dough).
Dough is a noun and doesn't have any tenses. Only verbs have tenses.
no dough
The correct spelling of the plural noun is tamales(Mexican dough-wrapped food).
As a mass noun, pastry is a type of light flour-based dough used to make various foodstuffs.
The word 'shred' is both a noun and a verb. Example uses:Noun: If you have the smallest shred of doubt, then don't do it.Verb: I'll shred the cheese while you roll the dough.
A dough that deals dough
"Dough" and "pastry" are literal English equivalents of the Italian word pasta. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation of the feminine singular noun remains "PA-sta" in Italian.
a dough mixer combines the ingredients. a dough kneader kneads the dough, preparing it for baking
hard dough