The adjective form is "doughy."
But note that this has another meaning besides "dough-like in appearance or texture." The adjective doughy can also mean similarly pallid and flabby. In Australian slang, it means that someone is slow to understand, or dense.
Therapeutic as in Baking bread and kneading dough can be very therapeutic.
It is a type of dough that never dries out kinda like play dough.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective.
no dough
There is no adjective for the noun biscuit. The noun is often used as a noun adjunct (e.g. biscuit dough).
no dough
Therapeutic as in Baking bread and kneading dough can be very therapeutic.
Adding the suffix -ful to play creates the adjective playful. Example: That dog is very playful.
That is the correct spelling of the verb or adjective "needed" (required). There is a less-used verb with the same sound, referring to dough that is kneaded (rolled).
A dough that deals dough
sourdough. It is made up of two words sour and dough. In the sentence it describes the bread. Sourdough is a compound word. It can be an adjective but it isn't a compound adjective. The sentence isn't written correctly to indentify any compound adjectives . It should be "She ordered a sourdough-ham sandwich." Sourdough-ham would be the compound adjective.
a dough mixer combines the ingredients. a dough kneader kneads the dough, preparing it for baking
hard dough
A dough sheeter is simply used for dough. More specifically, a dough sheeter is a dough roller that is mechanized and more effective than a manual dough roller.
adjective -- I like crisp lettuce verb -- First crisp the bread crumbs in the oven noun -- The toast was burnt to a crisp.