That would depend on where you are, in some countries, snow and cold, others hot and humid, some do not have a Christmas as we know it, for religious reasons. so lots of different people eat different things depending on where in the world you are and what religion you follow if any. so could be many smells depending on where you are!
You taste oxygen. You taste the smell of the oxygen.
yellow snow or even worse brown snow
It is a hint of chopped tree smell with peppermint taste.
the ragged things on your floor taste like pasta and Christmas trees. sometimes during the day or in the morning or at night they taste like unicorns and smell like your hair
Smell is a large part of taste. If you can't smell, things will taste differently.
Sense of taste is largely affected by the sense of smell. So outside odors will positively or negatively affect the sense of taste.
just smell it and it will give you a taste.
they don't tend to SMELL they use their tongue to taste the air.
No, because 70-75 percent of taste comes from smell. Taste buds allow the perception of only bitter, salty, sweet and sour tastes. It is the odor (smell) molecules from food that give the most taste sensation. You might taste a little, but not enough. Yes, you can taste without smell. I was born with anosmia (no sense of smell) and I can taste things just as well as the next person.
the sense of smell is more developed than taste because most of the nuance in taste actually comes from smell. you can only taste three things salt, bitter, and sweet. the rest is your sense of smell which provides a much greater variety.
Smell, Taste, Hear, See, and Feel
Our senses of taste and smell allow us to experience things by detecting chemicals in the air or on our tongues. Taste buds on our tongues and olfactory receptors in our noses send signals to our brain, which interprets these signals as different flavors and scents.