果仁巧克力 is brownies in Chinese.
Brownies are Brownies in Swedish(:
Accueillir aux brownies.
Chinese people say hello by saying ni hao.
in my opinion i would say the taste and looks - if it looks good people will try it and if it tastes nice its one of the best brownies (:
Brownies were made from Girl Scouts, so I guess you could say that the culture brownies are made from is American
There are no good statistics on the number of people who eat brownies, there is no way to keep track of all those people, but I would say that lots and lots of people eat brownies! I bet there are more people who do eat brownies then there are people who don't eat brownies!
"Brownies and milk" would be pronounced "buraunii to gyuunyuu."
It's difficult to say brownies in Himalayan since they don't eat brownies in the Himalaya's - it's difficult to name something that doesn't actually exist in their culture.
In general, when referring to the entire population as a whole, you would say "the Chinese are an ancient people". To say "Chinese are ancient people" leaves the reference population undefined - are you referring to the entire population of China or are you referring to a select group of Chinese individuals who are older?
Nothing about brownies sounds wrong!Another response:The word "brownies" is a plural form that is sometimes used as a singular noun, and so it sounds wrong. The difficulty can be avoided by slightly altering the phrase.One should not say: "The brownies is ready," but "The brownies are ready."However it would be proper to say, "The pan of brownies is ready."
In Spanish, brownies are called "brownies" as well, often with no translation. In French, they are referred to as "brownies" or "gâteau au chocolat." In Italian, they can also be called "brownies" or "torta al cioccolato." Similarly, in German, they are known as "Brownies."
In English people say (HAIRY) but in Chinese they say (毛茸茸Máoróngrōng)