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The homophones for "to cut thin slices" are "pare" and "pear" (fruit).
Pare and Pair.
pare and pear
The words you are after is "pare" (thin slices) and "pear" (the fruit).
To pare. / A pear.
two alike- pair fruit- pair cut off skin- pare
The homophones for "to cut thin slices" are "pare" and "pear" (fruit).
The word "pare" is one of three homophones (sound-alike words):pare - to cut, slice, whittle down in sizepair - two, or a matched setpear - the oblong fruit(it is a near-homophone of payer - one who pays)
pare, pair
The two homophones (sound-alike words) are: HAVING - (verb to have) possessing HALVING - (verb to halve, to cut in half) dividing into two equal parts
you eat a star fruit whole. so you can eat the skin and all except for the black stem part of it.
Yes. Cut the avocado in half around the pit. Remove the pit and scoop the fruit out of the skin.
Pare and Pair.
* Strawberries. * Pineapples also have their seeds on the outside. They are removed when the tough skin is cut off. The seeds are in the little pits in the skin. * the Cashew fruit has the seed outside too!
take the skin off, cut in pices, serve with lemon juice and salt
This would be a peach. The fruit is the same color as the skin, and the seed in the center is called a stone.
When a fruit is cut in half, roughly half.