The term "marked chicken" typically refers to chicken that has been labeled or tagged for a specific purpose, such as being on sale, indicating it is pre-cooked, or specifying it as a specialty product. In some contexts, it may also denote chicken that has been inspected and approved for quality. Additionally, "marked" could imply that the chicken is distinguishable for certain reasons, such as being processed in a particular way or having a specific certification.
no the word chicken fingers is not a compound word
The Hindi word for chicken is murgah.
search "is there another word for chicken besides chicken" to get answer P.S. let him/her know "be" and "sides" are one word
Are chickens injected with chicken broth? That depends on whether the chicken is fresh or packaged, and how it was processed by the producer. Packaged chicken in the U.S. should be marked on the label if it has added broth or water.
No, the word "chicken" does not have a long vowel. The "i" in chicken is a short vowel sound.
Yes, the word chicken is countable, the plural form is chickens.
The Old English word was 'cycen' meaning a young fowl, which became young chicken, which then became any chicken.
The noun chicken (the creature) is a countable noun; one chicken or a dozen chickens. The noun chicken (the food, a substance) is a mass (non-count) noun; units are expressed in pieces of chicken, parts of chicken, pounds of chicken, etc.
"Ayam" is the Bahasa word for Chicken
The prefix you would add to the word "marked" to change the meaning to "mark before" is "pre-". So it becomes "pre-marked."
The African Luhya term for the English word 'chicken' is Ingokho.
The Romanian language equivalent of chicken is găină.