Eyes, nose and tongue help salu to find the food is stale or not
Eye, nose and tongue sense to find the stale of the food
the microbes in the moisture of a stale food attracts fungus to reproduce ,where the stale food becomes the substrata for the fungus to grow and multiply.
chemical change in evaporated milk take place when it becomes stale (panis) or whnehn a product stale. -- CORTEZ SOFIA -- gr. 6
stale kale
Eventually it can do that. Mold can grow on bread as well as any other food. Airborne mold spores only require a moist environment to thrive and colonize. This process is not as rapid though as compared to mold forming on food in a warmer environment.
You breathe in fresh air which contains the oxygen you need. you get rid of carbon dioxide when you breathe out stale air
The homophone for "stale" is "stale," as in when two or more words sound the same but have different meanings.
I do not have a stale mouth. Who said that i have a stale mouth? :D :D
No, "stale" is not a verb. It is an adjective that describes something old or no longer fresh.
No, the word stale is an adjective. The noun form for the adjective stale is staleness.
stale laptop with catsup
The antonym of stale is fresh.
fresh
Stale is the correct spelling.
A noun for damp, stale air is must or mustiness; the adjectives are musty or dank.
The opposite of stale (food, air) would be fresh. The opposite of stale (tired, cliche) would be new, or original.
I don't know about them going stale, but they do cake.
They just get stale