Ice cream is two words. The plural is ice creams
The correct spelling is "vanilla ice cream" (ice cream flavored with vanilla extract).
Either could be correct, depending on the sentence. "She bought an ice cream" means that she bought one ice cream and that the kind is not important. "She bought the ice cream" could be an answer to a question or making a formal statement about who bought it. You could also say, "She bought ice cream."
That is the correct spelling of the question "Do you like eating ice cream?"
Tastier is correct when forming the comparative:Chocolate ice cream is tastier than strawberry ice cream.
The correct spelling is pleasant.An example sentence is "the ice cream was very pleasant".
you make loads of icecreams
Does anyone want ice cream
The correct spelling is "vanilla ice cream" (ice cream flavored with vanilla extract).
Some icecreams are fatty. It depends on the flavor. But icecream is a good source of dairy. Check the carbs, and calories, and nutrition facts. HOPE THIS HELPED ;)
Either could be correct, depending on the sentence. "She bought an ice cream" means that she bought one ice cream and that the kind is not important. "She bought the ice cream" could be an answer to a question or making a formal statement about who bought it. You could also say, "She bought ice cream."
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That is the correct spelling of the question "Do you like eating ice cream?"
a rational number is used to count ice cream = example they count how many icecreams the gout so if they have 7 it would be 7 /3 because 3 is the rational number
No, it is not. If you are giving someone ice cream, you ask "Would you like some ice cream?" If you are the one who wants ice cream, the polite way is to ask "May I please have some ice cream?" Some people also say "Could I have some ice cream, please?"
It has about 156 calories (678 KJ) So if u eat like 3 icecreams u might get fatter
Tastier is correct when forming the comparative:Chocolate ice cream is tastier than strawberry ice cream.
Past tense of possessing something. "I had an ice-cream"