No. Bitterness is generally associated with bases while acids tend to lend a sour taste.
Acids taste sour; bases normally taste bitter.
Slippery and tastes bitter.....not properties of an acid --Apex:)
it is a base because it tastes bitter. now if it was an acid it would taste sour and not bitter like a base.
Acids typically taste sour or sharp, rather than bitter. Examples of sour-tasting acids include citric acid in citrus fruits and acetic acid in vinegar. Bitter tastes are more commonly associated with alkaline substances.
A bitter taste is typically associated with bases. Bases have a bitter taste and feel slippery, unlike acids which have a sour taste.
it is a base because it tastes bitter. now if it was an acid it would taste sour and not bitter like a base.
Acids taste sour; bases normally taste bitter.
It tastes sour. Other tastes are sweet, bitter and salty. Bitter is alkaline, the opposite of acid in Ph. And salty is the combination of an acid and a base (alkaline), which is a salt.
I think it has to do with the acid content.
Ascorbic acid is not a contant of bitter leaf.It is contant of citrus fruits like orange,lemon etc.It is also called as Vitamin C.
An Acid is a substance that tastes sour and Base is a substance that tastes bitter and feels slippery.
acid tastes sour and can only be tasted on the sides of your tongue
An Acid is a substance that tastes sour and Base is a substance that tastes bitter and feels slippery.
Anything sour or tart is acid, anything bitter is alkali. Does that answer your question?
Slippery and tastes bitter.....not properties of an acid --Apex:)
Well, Technically it's both sour and bitter
it is a base because it tastes bitter. now if it was an acid it would taste sour and not bitter like a base.