Either could be correct, depending on the sentence. "She bought an ice cream" means that she bought one ice cream and that the kind is not important. "She bought the ice cream" could be an answer to a question or making a formal statement about who bought it. You could also say, "She bought ice cream."
Ice cream is two words. The plural is ice creams
The correct spelling is "vanilla ice cream" (ice cream flavored with vanilla extract).
That is the correct spelling of the question "Do you like eating ice cream?"
Tastier is correct when forming the comparative:Chocolate ice cream is tastier than strawberry ice cream.
The correct spelling is pleasant.An example sentence is "the ice cream was very pleasant".
Does anyone want ice cream
Ice cream is two words. The plural is ice creams
The correct spelling is "vanilla ice cream" (ice cream flavored with vanilla extract).
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YES!! He loved ice cream, apparently he spent $200 for ice cream one time, and bought an "cream machine for ice" for his home, Mount Vernon.
take it back to where you bought it and tell them the story. show them the receipt and the expiration date on the ice cream.
1.75 pounds = 793.786648 grams
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That is the correct spelling of the question "Do you like eating ice cream?"
No, I don't think so.If you did, it would look like this (for example):He bought a Chocolate and Strawberry ice cream cone.I think it'd be better like this:He bought a chocolate and strawberry ice cream cone.
All store bought ice cream has salt in it. Most home made ice cream does also.
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