you technically speaking taste with your nose you get senses like hot sweet and sour on your tongue , this is proven by having water and having an orange or anything strong tasting under your nose you should get a orange taste instead of a band taste.
yes you smell what you taste.
no
Food doesn't "affect" taste, taste is a property of food.
Chemicals affect the taste sensation communicated to your brain, from sweetness through to sourness.
it is probably because it freezes and numbs your tastebuds for a while, which then results in different taste
Sense of taste is largely affected by the sense of smell. So outside odors will positively or negatively affect the sense of taste.
because other nasty smelling things nearby will affect the taste of the food you're eating
yes
The importance smelling to the ability to taste is Your Mom.
Taste buds on the tongue only detect a limited range of tastes; sweet, sour, salty, bitter, or meaty. Nuances of flavor depend entirely on smell.
sight,touch, hearing, taste,smelling
sight,touch, hearing, taste,smelling
sight,touch, hearing, taste,smelling
Cats mostly rely on hearing, smelling, taste, and sight.
by smelling not so nearer
Yes. A large portion of taste is based on smell. The tongue can only taste sweet, bitter, sour and salty.
The sense of taste is greatly affected by the sense of smell and the scent may change the food taste.
Sight and scent both affect taste.