I would say that it is.
Odorless :)
For example:Scented (S) is dominant, odorless (s) is recessive, Smooth (O) is dominant, hairy (o) is recessive.a heterozygous scented, smooth-stemmed plant (SsOo) crossed with a fully homozygous odorless, hairy-stemmed plant (ssoo) will get offspring with phenotype ratio 1:1:1:1.Offspring:SsOo (scented, smooth), ssOo (odorless, smooth), Ssoo (scented, hairy), ssoo (odorless, hairy) = 1:1:1:1.
There is no antonym for the word smelling. Not only is tasting not an antonym for smelling, it is closely related to smelling. Antonyms do not describe this kind of relationship. You could say that smelling and tasting are related senses, or that they are correlates, or that they each have to do with chemical properties of the thing being smelled or tasted. The words are not antonyms.Common antonyms are:hot: coldup: downleft: rightfull: empty
We did an experiment in school involving epsom salt... I recall it smelled kind of like maple syrup, maybe that was just the container.
Polonium is odorless.
salvia scented
Dew-Scented was created in 1992.
samll dull with no scented
They smell like rubber when you first get them but they can change their smells if things like hairspray and perfume touch them
Yes, ozone is odorless.
Yes, technetium is a silver-gray metal and is considered to be odorless.
Yes, it can be. Scented is the past tense and past participle of the verb to scent, and the adjective means having a scent or smell. Examples: scented oil, scented soap.