I like to look at the flowers in th garden whilst baking with good quality flour.
The word flower comes from the Latin word flos or flor-. The old French word was "flour" or "flor" which was used as "flour" in middle English and English and is now "Flower." The spelling "flour" is now only used to describe ground grain.
In the sentence Then they add flour and some salt,the adjective is some
flower, flour
The plural of bloom is blooms.
There are two nouns in the sentence: flower and fragrance.
"Does a mill make flour?" "A mill does make flour."
yes you can make paste with flour and water but only if you put a lot of flour in and more water than the flour
No. Flour is made from grain.
This is a sentence that utilizes the homophones flour and flower.
flour-flower
As a noun: Make sure you use 1 cup of flour exactly for this recipe.As a verb: The baker will flour the surface so that the dough won't stick to it.As an adjective: After opening a bag of flour, keep it in a sealed container to prevent contamination by flourbeetles.
No, "flower" and "flour" are not homophones. They are pronounced differently, with "flower" having a long "ow" sound and "flour" having a short "ou" sound.
Flour.
If flour was spelled flower, it would be a bean in flower form, or the flower of a bean plant. Spelled f-l-o-u-r, it is flour made out of beans.
A homophone for "flour" is "flower." Both words are pronounced the same way but have different meanings and spellings.
There is no specific recipe for a flower cake, as it is a style of decorating a cake and not baking one. To make a flower cake one can use either a cake mix or scratch recipe for the cake. Next either make a cake to shape like a flower or cupcakes that can be place in the shape of a flower. Ice the cake/cupcakes and decorate.
Flour.