Mayo
Tomato
Pickle
Jelly
Meat
Cheese
Mustard
"Viscous" is a good word that can be used to describe something that is slimy.
Yes, slimy is an adjective. It refers to something that is slippery, greasy, or covered in a sticky substance.
Yes, "slimy" is an adjective. It describes something that is sticky and slippery to the touch.
Commercial food slicers are huge machines, so it is very unlikely that one could fall into a sandwich. Further, if something that large fell onto my sandwich, it probably would not be an environmental hazard, but it might smash my sandwich.
sandwich
Onomatopoeia typically refers to words that phonetically imitate sounds. For "slimy," there isn't a direct onomatopoeic word, but one might use "slurp" or "squelch" to evoke the sound associated with slimy textures. These words convey the wet, slippery noises one might associate with slimy substances.
No. it is not. Slimy is an adjective, related to the noun slime.
Lettuce Tomatoes Bean sprouts Mayonnaise Cucumbers Avocado Tofu Cheese
this is a sandwich, that is a slice of something between two slices of bread.
It might depend on what you have in your sandwich and how big your bag of chips is.
Sandwich is not an adjective. It is a noun and does not describe anything. "Sand" might be a word, but "wich" is not. Sandwich is actually named after The Duke of Sandwich, a place in England. Therefore, sandwich is neither compound nor an adjective.
Muck is slimy mud, or something which makes something dirty. It is also an obsolete, derogatory term for money.