Please pass the mashed potatoes.
Yes, I would like more mashed potatoes.
The orphans ate lumpy, cold oatmeal day after day. That old matress is lumpy and uncomfortable. If the cake batter is lumpy, keep stirring it.
In the sentence "He bought some potatoes in the market," the word "bought" is a verb. It is the action that the subject "he" performed.
The sentence "Potatoes are an ancient crop" is a declarative sentence. The simple subject of the sentence is "potatoes."
Yes, a comma is used before "etc" when it is placed in the middle of a sentence, as it indicates the continuation of a list. For example, "I need to buy apples, oranges, bananas, etc., for the party."
The plural form for the word "potato" is "potatoes."
I like potatoes. On the CONTRARY, I don't like them mashed.
"Add the potatoes to the boiling water." The chef projected. Potatoes grow out of the ground, you often have to dig a bit to reach them. Potatoes are a starchy food.
"mashed potatoes" are crushed tubers.
Yes, mashed potatoes are made from potatoes and are considered a vegetable.
yeah, scientists have figured it out. but its POTATOES not mashed potatoes
There are allergies to almost anything. For mashed potatoes, though, you might consider what has gone into the mashed potatoes. If milk or milk products were ingredients and someone who has milk allergies eats the mashed potatoes, then they will appear to be allergic to mashed potatoes. If sulfite-treated potatoes are used and the consumer is allergic to sulfites, they will likely have a reaction to the mashed potatoes.
Mashed potatoes is potatismos in Swedish. I don't know what rutabaga is.
The Thanksgiving dinner was a convivial feast filled with not only turkey and mashed potatoes but also with laughter and shared moments of joy.
La purée is mashed potatoes in French.
Theres a song called mashed potatoes?!?!?
mashed potataoes are not a species and o not have a genus they are just potatoes that have been mashed
The pronouns that take the place of the plural noun potatoes are they as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and them as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:I've baked some potatoes for dinner. They are ready now.How do you like your potatoes? I like them mashed.