Yes, the noun 'steak' is a countable noun; one steak or enough steaks for everyone.
Yes and no. Steak is a type cut of beef, and beef is meat (or muscle tissue, depending on how you look at it) from cattle. Essentially what I'm trying to say is that steak is beef, but beef is not steak.
The noun 'steak' is a countable noun as a word for a cut of meat or fish that is suitable for frying or grilling.Example: I need six steaks for the dinner party.The noun 'steak' is an uncountable noun as a word for the meat of a cow of a specific quality, a word for a substance.Example: The steak is cut to various sizes which are usually more expensive than other cuts.
beef steak
JUGHEADS at RMALL in Thane. They do serve Beef Chilly and Beef Steak Sizzlers.
yes it is but from different part of a cow and steak is more expensive :)
No. It should smell like raw beef - if it is a beef steak. Or pork, if it is a pork steak. And so on.
No, steak is beef that comes from cows.
Steak tartare is a meat dish made from finely chopped or ground raw beef or horse meat.
Beef - porterhouse steak
Steak is a kind of cooked beef. Also it is a wooden dagger.
Bifteck for beef, tranche for ham, and steak for just about everything else are French equivalents of the English word "steak." The respective pronunciations will be "beef-tehk," "trawnsh," and "stehk" in French.
Many food dishes and recipes use beef here are some of the most common in the UK, a beef sandwich, beef stew, steak pie, bolognaise sauce, beef wellington, cottage pie, roast beef, beef burgers, steak sandwich and beef spread.