Yes, if the tasting happened in the past.
If you're tasting it now, you would say 'It tastes so good'.
Yes, the phrase "It was so a good movie" is not grammatically correct because "so" is an adverb that should be used before an adjective to intensify it, like "so good." In this case, "such" should be used before a noun like "movie," as in "It was such a good movie."
"have well and" can be a grammatically correct phrase only if the word "and" is followed by another adverb, with "well and truly" probably being the most common. In fact this phrase is so common that it is best avoided as a cliche.
The correct phrase would be "he has had."For example: He has had his dinner, so off to bed.
The correct phrase is "have plans." This is because "plans" is a plural noun, so it should be paired with the plural verb "have."
Because NRI is read as En-Ar-I so it starts with a vowel sounding "A". So an NRI is the correct usage as "a" or "an" are used according to the sound and not according to the letters.If you use the full form, you will have to make use of "a" i.e. "A non resident Indian".
Yes, the phrase "It was so a good movie" is not grammatically correct because "so" is an adverb that should be used before an adjective to intensify it, like "so good." In this case, "such" should be used before a noun like "movie," as in "It was such a good movie."
The phrase is twoseparatewords, so no need for the dash. the correct spelling is in charge.
feels so good
Belongs is the third person singular form of belong. It is not a linking verbTo test to see if a verb is a linking verb try replacing the verb with IS and see if it makes sense. egThe food tasted good. -- replace tasted with is -- The food is good. SO tasted is a linking verbThe money belongs to me. -- replace belongs with is -- The money is to me. So belongs is not a linking verb
"have well and" can be a grammatically correct phrase only if the word "and" is followed by another adverb, with "well and truly" probably being the most common. In fact this phrase is so common that it is best avoided as a cliche.
yes,but it is a kind of idiomatic expression
I heard it before. So we can't both be wrong.
The correct phrase would be "he has had."For example: He has had his dinner, so off to bed.
well, it was really by an accident that he made it... people say he was just playing with his stuff n he cooked it n he tasted it n guess whatIT TASTED GOOD! so he like, yah....... :)
"dip" generally refers to tobacco products, often not the smoking kind, more chewing tobacco. so when you have " tasted the dip" you have tasted a tobacco product.
You so beautiful
Swiss chalet