No!
no
Marshmallow Fluff.
He wasn't a ghost. He was a giant Stay-Puff Marshmallow Man. He was made of marshmallow.
The kindom was Egypt and marshmallow was grown on a marshmallow plant.
Actually, marshmallow plays the same person as orange and pear. They just made marshmallow's voice higher.
no
Yes, the word 'marshmallow' is a common noun, a general word for a marshmallow plant, or a soft confectionery made from a mixture of sugar, albumen, and gelatin.
The plural of marshmallow is marshmallows, a word for the candies formed from marshmallow and a plant with pink flowers that grows in wet areas.The word marshmallow is also an uncountable noun as a word for the substance made from whipped egg whites and sugar.
The plural of marshmallow is marshmallows, a word for the candies formed from marshmallow and a plant with pink flowers that grows in wet areas.The word marshmallow is also an uncountable noun as a word for the substance made from whipped egg whites and sugar.
The noun 'marshmallow' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The marshmallow in the center is my favorite part. (subject of the sentence)The sweetness that the marshmallow adds makes it the children's favorite. (subject of the relative clause)Mom puts a marshmallow in my hot chocolate. (direct object of the verb 'puts')I made the frosting with marshmallow. (object of the preposition 'with')
Marshmallow
Marshmallow is homogeneous because even though it is a mixture, you can only appears to be 1 thing and because marshmallow is made by dissolving. SO there is a solvent and a solute