Howdya do, howdya do, howdya do?
Performed by Eileen Barton and written by Al Hoffman, Bob Merrill & Clem Watts in 1950.
If I Knew You were Coming I'd have Baked a Cake.
"If I knew you were coming I'd have baked a cake" is a song from Sesame Street.
"Would have" is generally a present conditional, but also an imperfect describing habit or routine. For example: If I had known you were coming I would have baked a cake; She worked six days a week, but on a Thursday she would have been home. NEVER use "would have" in the protasis (if-clause) of a condition!
A rum-soaked cake is known as a "baba." After the cake has baked and cooled it is sprinkled with rum and is allowed to soak it in before it is decorated.
A cake that was broiled instead of baked - by accident one must assume - would need to be thrown out, because the top would be burned and the interior raw.
No, Baked Alaska origins from China. this is true from wikipedia.org.
Basic Idea:It is a very common mistake to say things like 'could of', 'should of', 'might of', or 'would of'. When talking with friends this isn't so bad, but in written English or in more formal settings, it sounds very bad. You should say 'could have', should have', might have' or 'would have'. They can be abbreviated with 've when writing dialogue or when quoting someone, as in should've. The abbreviation is probably what leads to the 'of' error. In the cases above, the word have is a helping verb; it helps to clarify the verb's tense. "If I had known that you were coming, I would have baked a cake." At that past time, I did not know that you were coming. But if I HAD known [had is the past tense of have], if I could go back and change the past, I would have baked a cake. The word 'of' is never used to help express a verb's tense. Check the link for a helpful site on helping verbs! [NOTE: NOT for the faint of heart. If the above is enough, you should go to your next question.]You might ask if it would be ok to say "If I knew you were coming, I would have baked a cake." The difference is subtle. Saying "If I knew" implies that perhaps I knew, and perhaps I did not; it is unclear to me at this time whether or not I knew. And that might be exactly what you want to say. But if you are interested in the clearest language this leads to a logical conflict, doesn't it? It is unclear to me at this time whether or not I knew you were coming, but we can use the baking of a cake as a partial proof. If no cake was baked, then certainly I did not know you were coming. Assuming for a moment there was no cake, I am saying that I'm certain I did not know, but I'm expressing it with a verb that implies uncertainty. If a cake was baked, there is still ambiguity. "If I had known" implies that I in fact did not know, but would have taken action if I had.
of course i ate cuze if ididnt i would be hungry
Chocolate does not rise when baked. Chocolate may be an ingredient in a product such as cake or cookies that would rise when baked because a leavening is added to the batter.l
The sentence could be completed with "baked." This would result in the sentence reading: "After the cake was baked, we ate it." This completion makes sense as cakes are typically baked before they are ready to be consumed.
Vanilla cake.
Miss Maudie Atkinson baked a large cake for Jem and two smaller ones for Scout and Dill.