Those can be grouped as staples (the products important to a household, especially a food, that people eat or use regularly).
Those can be grouped as commodities (something that can be bought and sold, especially a basic food product).
There is no standardized collective nouns for tea, coffee,sugar, or flour. This is most likely because these staples have come in many forms in many places over the centuries.
Collective nouns are an informal part of language. Any noun that is descriptive of the thing grouped can function as a collective noun. Some common examples are:
i dont know
Grains
The collective noun is a company of firemen (firefighters).
There is no standard collective noun for spades or rakes.The collective noun that can apply is a set of tools.
The collective noun is an army of caterpillars.
Some collective nouns for cars is a fleet of cars or a line of cars.
The collective nouns are:a sack of potatoesa bunch of carrots
Coffee, sugar, tobacco to name a few.
Buy it at food Basic.
flour, sugar, salt, baking soda, milk or water ?????????????????????????????????????
In New Zealand called icing sugar - confectioners sugar would be another name. Ground as fine as flour, and yummy on the strawberries and cream.
Its the smallest spoon you can get, for using things .i.e sugar coffee etc
Crust Flour Apples Oven Sugar
barbados, barley sugar, brown sugar, candy sugar, castor sugar, Chinese sugar, cinnamon sugar, coarse sugar, coconut sugar, coffee sugar, confectioner's sugar, corn sugar, cube sugar, dark brown sugar, date sugar, decorator's sugar, coarse sugar, demerara sugar
Yes and no. They are both ground corn but the texture is different. Cornmeal is ground to be like coffee, while masa is powdered. They don't swap out well in recipes.
The collective name for a group of sailors are called a crew
"Sudden Impact" (1983).
1 - coffee beans 2 - coffee maker 3 - water 4 - sugar 5 - mugs 6 - milk/creamer 7 - filter
cold too hot too weak too strong no sugar no cream