You could describe them as
Delectable
Little monkeys that tickle your taste buds
bitter
sweet
sour
tangy
scrumptious
Delightful
Amazing
Heavenly
i don't think that he did eat sweets.
Candy is the usual term for sweets.
a historian would describe your life by you telling him all about you and your family.
'sweets' comes from the fact that they are sugary and sweet, as they used to be called deserts.
describe cubist ideology?
Sweets, as in candy, would be 'des bonbons'.
Say John and michael were given 10 sweets to split in half. Each would get half of the sweets so both would have 5 sweets. The ratio of sweets each would be 5:5 or simplified, this is 1:1 ratio.
One sweet would cost 10p and so 7 sweets would cost 7 times 10 = 70p
The number of bags of sweets in 1kg would depend on the weight of each individual bag of sweets. For example, if each bag weighs 100g, then there would be 10 bags in 1kg.
Because they add smell to the sweets, which attracts people to eat it and buy some more. Without it, you would like it but not as much as the sweets with the added scent.
They would love to eat sweets that come from different parts of the worl for example(mexican candy)
The plural of sweet would be sweets. Though the word is more commonly used as an adjective than as a noun.
Paul, Mark and James would each get nine sweets.
Yes, it is great as all I would ever want is sweets or chocolate and 1.8 liters of sweets.
The number of sweets in a 2.75kg jar depends on the type and size of the sweets, as they can vary significantly in weight. For example, if each sweet weighs approximately 10 grams, there would be around 275 sweets in the jar. Conversely, if the sweets are smaller, say 5 grams each, the jar could hold about 550 sweets. To get an accurate count, it's best to weigh the individual sweets and do the calculations accordingly.
Divide by the number of parts in the ratio. Imagine sharing sweets between person A and person B in the ratio 2:3. As a proportion Person A would receive 2/5ths (40%) of the sweets and B would receive 3/5ths (60%) of the sweets.
no