It can be used both as a verb and a noun.
I am toasting bread by the fire. (verb)
The toast can have marmalade spread on it .(noun).
Yes, cheers is a verb form (cheer, cheers, cheering, cheered). The word cheers is also a noun, the plural of the noun cheer. Cheers is also an interjection, often heard as a toast.
The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences are:"I enjoy ice cream"."She enjoys Nutella spread on toast"."I am enjoying this music"."I enjoyed the film last night".
There is no plural of the word toast. There is only 'pieces of' toast.
Alliteration for toast
There are several potential synonyms for toast depending on the use of the word as a noun verb or adjective:As the noun meaning recooked bread synonyms include rusk, Zwieback, Biscotti, Skorpor, TvebakkerAs the verb meaning to partially cook synonyms include char, brown, grill, crisp.As the noun meaning introductory remarks (Offer a drink in honour of a person) potential synonyms include pledge, introduce, wish good fortune, wassail, saluteAs an adjective (His chances were toast) synonyms could include destroyed, few, ruined, gone, doomedAs noun (He was the toast of the town) synonyms could include celebrity, social lion, celebrity, star
John will toast a peice wonderbread and transform it into toast.
No. Your sentence doesn't have a noun or verb at the end of it. The toast always HAS burned crust.
Yes the word toast is a noun. It can also be a verb depending on the circumstance.
No, butter can be used as a verb or a noun but not an adverb.Noun: He likes butter on his toast.Verb: He butters his toast.
Yes, cheers is a verb form (cheer, cheers, cheering, cheered). The word cheers is also a noun, the plural of the noun cheer. Cheers is also an interjection, often heard as a toast.
"Toast" may be the term you need, since technically, dough is baked once to produce bread then cooked a second time to make toast. However, one does not use the term "bake" when making toast; the same word acts as both noun and verb. "Mom toasts bread to make toast."
The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences are:"I enjoy ice cream"."She enjoys Nutella spread on toast"."I am enjoying this music"."I enjoyed the film last night".
It depends, how much toast do you have.... It also depends on how many toast your toaster can toast.
The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences are:"I enjoy ice cream"."She enjoys Nutella spread on toast"."I am enjoying this music"."I enjoyed the film last night".
The homophone for "toast" is "toes".
There is no plural of the word toast. There is only 'pieces of' toast.
No, you can only toast bread.You can in theory if you partly toast bread then toast it again at a later period, then you would be toasting toast, as the first toasting changes the bread. toasting a full toasted toast would make it burn and possibly start on fire.