needs, kneads
Homophones for wants and requires are haunt and inquires. Homophones for mix and squeeze are ticks and please.
A homophone for "to mix" is "tocks." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Mix flour, chocolate, sugar and butter to make cookie dough.
Some examples of Filipino words without direct English translations are "kilig" (the feeling of butterflies in your stomach when excited or in love), "sayang" (a mix of regret and feeling something is a waste), and "gigil" (the overwhelming urge to squeeze something cute).
The present tense for "mix" is "mix" for first and second person, and "mixes" for third person singular. For example: I mix the ingredients, you mix the batter, he mixes the drinks.
This phrase is a mix of English and Spanish and translates to "but I don't speak Spanish." It can be used when someone wants to acknowledge that they do not speak Spanish or understand a conversation happening in Spanish.
A homophone for "to mix" is "tocks." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
My uranus
Mix flour, chocolate, sugar and butter to make cookie dough.
lol
you squeeze lemons into water and mix sugar with it ! very easy!!
The stomach has muscles that squeeze and mix food as well as acids that break it down. The stomach, then, performs both mechanical and chemical digestion.
dough, do
well you can squeeze the juice out of them then mix with oil and voila!
stomach
The stomach has muscles that squeeze and mix food as well as acids that break it down. The stomach, then, performs both mechanical and chemical digestion.
small intesticnes
The stomach, or digestive system and/or digestive tract.