stirred is not an adjective it is a verb you dummy!
ill have a vodka martini: shaken, not 'stirred'.
When sugar is put into cold water and stirred, it will dissolve. The sugar molecules will disperse and mix evenly with the water molecules to form a sugar solution.
Water and oil do not mix together when stirred because they are immiscible. This is due to their different polarities - water is polar while oil is nonpolar. Instead, they separate into distinct layers, with water sinking to the bottom and oil floating on top due to differences in density.
Petrol and water do not mix well as petrol is hydrophobic and repels water. When mixed and stirred, the two liquids will separate into distinct layers with petrol forming the upper layer due to its lower density.
Mixture in general but there are much more specific categories.
The adjective is spelled adrenalized in US English, or adrenalised in the UK.It is variously used to mean tense or stirred to action.
No, the word stirred is not an adverb.The word stirred is a verb and sometimes a noun.Click here to see a dictionary entry for the word "Stirred".
The word 'carelessly' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb or an adjective. Examples:Modifying a verb: She carelessly stirred the pancake batter, splashing it all over the counter.Modifying an adjective: His carelessly spoken words hurt his chance for being hired.
Stirred is the past tense of stir.
Stirred was created on 2002-04-03.
The past tense of stir is stirred.
'Stirred vessel'? Not an expression I know.
The past participle of "stir" is "stirred."
ill have a vodka martini: shaken, not 'stirred'.
I stirred the porridge as it cooked
Shaken 'n' Stirred was created in 1984.
It is sugar that is stirred and is dissolved faster than regular sugar.