no it doesnt at all
Acids typically taste sour or sharp, not sweet, bitter, or salty. The sour taste of acidic substances is a result of their hydrogen ion concentration.
Acids taste sour; bases normally taste bitter.
No, acids are not sweet tasting. Acids are sour in taste due to their ability to release hydrogen ions when dissolved in water. Examples of sour-tasting acids include citric acid (found in citrus fruits) and acetic acid (found in vinegar).
The four major flavors that taste buds can detect are sweet, salty, sour, and bitter. Each flavor serves a different evolutionary purpose, such as indicating the presence of energy-rich foods (sweet) or potential toxins (bitter).
Acids have a sour taste.
it taste sour a little sour
Tangy,Sweet,Sour and Juicy
Granny Smith apples have a sour taste when they are not too ripe, but when they are they sometimes have a sweet taste
Tongues can taste sweet, sour, and bitter.
The four sensations of taste are sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. These sensations are detected by taste buds on the tongue.
no they dont tatse sour they sweet
Sweet and sour
yes, because people have the same tates like sweet,sour,bitter,and salty
There sweet but at the same time really sour but it also depends where they grow I think because of the climate like in jamaica there really sweet and in california there really sour.
No. But lemons don't taste sweet nor sour they just have a very tangy flavor witch appears to be sour.
These chewing gums have an extremely sour taste that becomes sweet and eventually has a neutral or tangy taste
tastey=bitter==sour==sweet==salty=