beat and beet
A homonym for "to mix with a spoon" could be "stir." So, when you stir your soup or your hot chocolate, you're essentially mixing it with a spoon. It's like a little dance party in your mug, but with less disco balls and more deliciousness.
One homonym for a yellow vegetable that starts with an A could be "acorn squash," which is a type of winter squash with a similar color.
carrot, karat chord, cord
The preposition "with" typically goes with the verb "mix." For example, "Mix the ingredients with a spoon."
A fun way to answer this is to ask a sister or brother to say the alphabet and see which letter sounds like a vegetable. Words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homonyms. "Hair" and "hare", "fair" and "fare", "night" and "knight", "bury" and "berry" are homonyms. "P" is a letter that sounds like a vegetable - the pea.
Homonyms are words that sound alike but have different meanings. Some homonyms of "shard" include "charred" (burnt or scorched), "shared" (participated in jointly), and "chard" (a type of vegetable). These words may sound the same when spoken but have distinct definitions and applications in language.
A knife a spoon a fork and veggies! its as easy as that
spoon
Vegetable oil is denser then water, so it floats on top. Oil is also a lipid, which is hydrophobic, meaning it does not like water. They do not mix.
The word "carat" (karat) has the homonyms (homophones) caret and carrot. CARET - the keyboard symbol (^) CARROT - a vegetable plant with an edible orange root
Homonyms for "capitol" are "capital" and "cattle."
No but you can make American muffens with vegetable oil