"The slightly mouldy smell of items stored away for many years reached his nose as he opened the old footlocker."
There was only one mouldy apple at the bottom of the barrel!
Because it will get soft and mouldy in damp areas
Yes, it is. An adjective is a word that describes a noun-- it gives us more information about a person, place, or thing: Note that the American spelling is "moldy" and the British spelling is "mouldy." In a sentence: That cheese is moldy (or mouldy).
The mouldy peach went mouldy and disintegrated in the bottom of Liam Booth's bag.
put in a ziploc bag and refrigerate NOTE: even if the cheese has gone mouldy, you can cut of the sides that are mouldy and still use the rest of the cheese. It tastes fine, and is perfectly alright to use.
It's not safe to make jam with mouldy cherries. Mould can produce harmful mycotoxins that may not be eliminated through cooking. To ensure food safety, it's best to discard any mouldy fruit and use fresh, healthy cherries for jam-making instead.
The Maori word "mouldy" means rotten or spoiled, typically referring to food that has gone bad.
only its skin if it sheds and the snake is dead but not when it is alive...
You can put coins in an mouldy wrapping and some of the mould spores will rub off onto the coins. This will make the coins LOOK mouldy but, being metallic, they will not actually be mouldy.
mouldy
NEVER feed mouldy hay to horses( or mouldy pellets, grains or chaff) Horses will usually tell you if the hay is mouldy(unless they are very hungry) but not wanting to eat it. Dont confuse mouldy hay with silage or haylage, but be verycareful feeding silage and haylage to horses.
I was extremely thirsty, but there was only a bottle of putrid water in the cell. The basement was dark and cold, and there was a putrid smell, as if something had gone rotten in there.