Iambic tetrameter
The expression, 'You can't have your cake and eat it too.' means that if you want to eat your cake, you will no longer have it. It's usually used to admonish someone who is fretting because they can't have everything they want.
Cake is a "want". It is not needed in order to survive.
meter tape are used for measuring the area of the field which is mostly used by forestry, carpenters and other things which is long that you want to know the exact area of it.
If a cake filling recipe requires lemon juice, can lime juice be used instead?
I think so but most people use cake mix. If you want to avoid "mixes" you can use a cake mix substitute like the one in the link below:
do you want a salty cake
no, the birthday cake is only used, to advance a Sim's age more quickly. If you want the Sim's birthday to happen before evening buy a cake, or if you have ageing in the options disabled, you can use a cake to make them older
You can add a tablespoon of honey to the mixture, depending on how sweet you want your sponge cake to be, and how big the cake is. I think it would be best to add a little at a time until you get the desired sweetness.
A meter is a unit of length. It can be used to measure a thickness. In this case, the thicknes IS one meter. If you want to convert this into some other unit, please clarify which one.
A homophone for the word "meter" is "metre." "Meter" is used in American English, while "metre" is used in British English to refer to the unit of length measurement.
If you see a cake and you want to know whose cake it is, you would say, "Whose cake is this?" If someone brings a cake as a present for someone else, and you want to know whom it's for, you can casually ask, "Who is it for?" Or you can ask very formally, "For whom is this cake?" "Whose cake is this for" doesn't make sense.
i think 9 by 11.5 inch. Very close. :) Actually it is 9 x 12.