Marshmallows do not contain meat. They are made entirely out of sugar and are coated in corn starch to help them retain their shape!
Marshmallow is a type of confectionery that is typically made from sugar, water and gelatin. In that sugar is derived from a sugarcane plant, there is a vegetable component here, whereas gelatin is a protein base from animals, so there's animal component there. Would we say that marshmallow belongs to either the vegetable or meat groups? Both seem kind of extraneous, as marshmallow has no nutritional value and is not a typical vegetable or meat product, but only made up of minute derivative elements of both.
Marshmallow Fluff.
He wasn't a ghost. He was a giant Stay-Puff Marshmallow Man. He was made of marshmallow.
Actually, marshmallow plays the same person as orange and pear. They just made marshmallow's voice higher.
The kindom was Egypt and marshmallow was grown on a marshmallow plant.
No!
no
Yes, the word 'marshmallow' is a common noun, a general word for a marshmallow plant, or a soft confectionery made from a mixture of sugar, albumen, and gelatin.
Marshmallow is homogeneous because even though it is a mixture, you can only appears to be 1 thing and because marshmallow is made by dissolving. SO there is a solvent and a solute
The plural of marshmallow is marshmallows, a word for the candies formed from marshmallow and a plant with pink flowers that grows in wet areas.The word marshmallow is also an uncountable noun as a word for the substance made from whipped egg whites and sugar.
The plural of marshmallow is marshmallows, a word for the candies formed from marshmallow and a plant with pink flowers that grows in wet areas.The word marshmallow is also an uncountable noun as a word for the substance made from whipped egg whites and sugar.
The noun 'marshmallow' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The marshmallow in the center is my favorite part. (subject of the sentence)The sweetness that the marshmallow adds makes it the children's favorite. (subject of the relative clause)Mom puts a marshmallow in my hot chocolate. (direct object of the verb 'puts')I made the frosting with marshmallow. (object of the preposition 'with')