No, "clotted" is not a noun. It is a verb or an adjective.
Cosmetics is a noun. Exhale is a verb. The other two are adjectives. Clotted is also a verb (past tense and past participle of clot).
The noun is the group is cosmetics.exhale = verbbeautiful = adjectiveclotted = adjective and the past participle of the verb to clot
The noun is cosmetics, a word for a preparation used to enhance the appearance of someone; a word for something superficial that is used to cover a deficiency or defect; a word for a thing.The word 'exhale' is a verb.The word 'clotted' is a verb and an adjective.The word 'beautiful' is an adjective.
I can give you several sentences.The blood had already clotted before the police arrived.I had clotted cream on my scones.The clotted blood had dried on the victim's clothes.
"Clotted cream" is "la crème fraîche épaisse" in French.
Double cream has to be at least 48% fat, clotted cream must be at least 55% fat .... do technically clotted cream has more in, but just barely.
Yes
Clotted, I suppose. It would work in the context: "The blood had clotted." I dunno if I'm right, though...
Clotted blood is normally obtained from a specimen of venous blood which has been allowed to clot by standing for 30 minutes. The resulting specimen is usually centrifuged to separate the clotted red blood cells from the serum.
Tourism and clotted cream.
fibrinogen