an orange/red
green
Saiva slowly changes starch into sugars.
antacid tablet are chewed because they can act faster whereas swallowed tablet act slowly.
Yes, it is because it describes a noun (something chewed or eaten).
On Friday, April 10th, 2009, Kendall Carr from Bozeman Montana, broke the record for "Most gum chewed" and "largest wad of gum". Kendall Carr succesfully chewed exactly one hundred pieces of gum in a time-span of fifty minutes. The wad of gum was chewed during last period in a Bozeman Middle School. The wad of gum was measured to be about as big as the average hand. I am one of the twenty students who witnessted Kendall preforming this amazing feat. To this day, Kendall keeps his wad of gum at his home -annomonus
My goodness YES YES. Just smelling it will give you brain damage.
Saiva slowly changes starch into sugars.
Putting it in the mouth is called ingestion. Then as is is chewed it is called mastication. Salivary amylase is added and then when it is chewed and mixed with saliva it is swallowed, also called deglutition.
An amylase is an enzyme that breaks starch down into sugar. Amylase is present in human saliva, where it begins the chemical process of digestion Foods that contain much starch but little sugar, such as rice and potato, taste slightly sweet as they are chewed because amylase turns some of their starch into sugar in the mouth.
food is chewed in your molars.
When boiled rice is chewed, the salivary amylase of the saliva changes the starch to maltose. Thus it tasted sweet and gave a negative result with iodine.Thanks
This is probably a magic trick. If it has been "eaten" (chewed) it is no longer "whole". The egg cannot reassemble itself in the stomach.An egg which is swallowed whole may be regurgitated whole, but this is a dangerous action.* Do not swallow a hard-boiled egg whole! This is a potentially fatal choking hazard! *
Grass that has been chewed completely.
Yes, you chewed most of the sugar out of it, or if it is sugar free, you chewed all the substitutes out of it
Chewing gum
"Chewed" is the past tense of "chew." It describes the action of grinding and crushing food with the teeth.
because you have chewed out all the sugar or if its sugarless you've chewed the artificial sweetener
"Chewed" is the past tense form of the verb "chew."