No, "sausages" is not a verb. It is a noun that refers to a type of food typically made from ground meat or poultry.
One way to use "brown" as a verb is in reference to cooking, where it means to cook food until the surface turns brown. For example, you can brown meat in a pan before stewing it.
Yes, "sausages" in French is a masculine word. The correct translation is "saucisses."
Yes, "sizzling sausages" is an example of alliteration because both words start with the same "s" sound. Alliteration involves using the same initial consonant sound in close proximity to create a rhythmic effect.
The term "bangers" to refer to sausages is believed to have originated in Britain during World War I, when sausages were made with a high water content due to meat shortages. The sausages would hiss, pop, and sometimes explode ("bang") while cooking, hence the nickname "bangers."
"Had" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "have."
One way to use "brown" as a verb is in reference to cooking, where it means to cook food until the surface turns brown. For example, you can brown meat in a pan before stewing it.
Er sausages. Er sausages. snatch of sausages
Sausages can come from pigs and cows it depends on the meat that is in them beef sausages ( cows ) Bacon sausages ( pig ) Pork Sausages ( pigs ) And Many more
meat sausages
sausages come from morocco.......................
Yes, "sizzling sausages" is an example of alliteration because both words start with the same "s" sound. Alliteration involves using the same initial consonant sound in close proximity to create a rhythmic effect.
Hormel makes sausages
It depends on how many sausages on each pizza ...my estamate would be, 107 sausages.
There are about 12 average sized sausages to a kilo.
The plural of sausage is sausages.
There is no standard collective noun for sausages, in which case a noun suitable for the situation can be used, for example:a string of sausagesa pan of sausagesa sauce of sausages
Papa Cantella's Sausages was created in 1980.