88 percent of Americans enjoy a spicy taco, the other 12 percent I have no clue what they are thinking.
Milk, ice cream, Mint gum
A taki is a spicy rolled up chip that is basically a small taco shell rolled up and has spicy seasoning all around it
yes as long as you enjoy the meat inside you and the soft shell
Taco dip is believed to have been invented in the early 50s. This is was a form of appetizer for South Americans.
Some words to describe a taco could be soft/hard, crunchy, juicy, meaty, spicy, Mexican, tasty...
You can get a taco by visiting a Mexican restaurant, food truck, or preparing one at home with tortillas, your choice of meat, toppings like cheese and salsa, and any other fillings you prefer. Enjoy your taco!
Add tandori masala and murch to it and then put some actimel to cool it a bit add the mixture to fresh keema and taco bay shurou. Pasand courou te sare ki bou
taco bell
The main menu at Seoul Taco consists of tacos, quesadillas, burritos, and gogi bowls (rice and veggie bowls). You can choose from your choice of meat - bulgogi (steak), chicken, spicy pork, or tofu.
To make taco bowls using a mold, simply place a tortilla in the mold and bake it until it becomes crispy and holds its shape. Fill the taco bowl with your desired ingredients and enjoy!
They went to go to eat tacos at taco bell
Are you talking about the possessive form, as in something that belongs to a taco (such as the taco's meat), or did you think, for some unknown reason, that there might be an apostrophe in some plurals (that aren't also made possessive at the same time)? If you thought that an apostrophe belongs in a standard plural, then why and where did you get that idea? Why and where does anyone, not just you, get an idea that a nonpossive plural would have an apostrophe? There is no apostrophe for plural of "taco," as in "They're selling tacos here." Use an apostrophe for the possessive form, though, as in "The taco's meat is good," or to show a contraction of "taco is," as in "This taco's great!"