Two possible adjectives for lather are bubbly and thick.
Mousse is a word of French origin. According to Wikipedia, it means "lather" or "foam."
No, it is a verb or a noun (to go around, to surround; a round shape). The adjective form is circular.
It is an adjective.It is a an adjective.
No, it is an adverb. The adjective is clumsy.
It can be. "Ideal" is an adjective and a noun.
Lather - song - was created in 1968.
A possible word is the adjective "thermal" (pertaining to heat production, insulation, or conversion).(*if this is an anagram question, the trivial anagram is lather, also halter)
Barry Lather was born on August 16, 1966.
Barry Lather was born on August 16, 1966.
Yes. Soap suds and lather are the same.
Please lather up the horse, then rinse her off.
Shampoos produce lather due to the presence of surfactants, which are chemicals that reduce the surface tension of water. When mixed with water, surfactants trap air to form bubbles, creating lather as the shampoo is massaged into the hair. The lather helps to distribute the shampoo evenly and cleanse the hair effectively.
To get in a lather means to become agitated, excited, or upset about something. The phrase comes from the foamy lather that forms when soap is agitated, suggesting a state of agitation or excitement in a person.
If she knew that you had plagiarised this sentence, your teacher should get into a right lather.
http://prezi.com/l_blz7fwlu9a/lather-and-nothing-else-plot-diagram/ http://prezi.com/mvjwf2ck6ovk/copy-of-lather-and-nothing-else-plot-diagram/ http://prezi.com/l_blz7fwlu9a/lather-and-nothing-else-plot-diagram/
Put soap in your hands, rub it around and then you will create lather.
No, it is designed to shaved without the use of lather.