This sentence is not correct. It could say Among all of the dark chocolates I've tasted, this one tastes the best. That would make it sound much better and be more grammatically correct.
Yes, if the tasting happened in the past. If you're tasting it now, you would say 'It tastes so good'.
quinine is bitter when tasted........
"taste" here is intransitive-- it is not active and you can not change it to passive. -- "taste" here means " has the taste" of - the is honey is not doing any tasting. If we change the sentence to; The bear tastes the honey, passive form would be The honey is tasted by the bear.
If I were to say that my dish of Thai noodles tasted like lime and grease, that would be a literal, rather than metaphorical statement. Lime has a distinctive, tart flavor, and grease also has a flavor, which is generally undesirable - food should not taste too greasy. If, however, I were to say that my new job tastes like lime and grease, that would be quite metaphorical, since jobs are not food and they do not have actual flavors. I might be suggesting that there is something interesting (the lime) but also something wrong (the grease) with my new situation. It would not be the easiest metaphor to interpret.
The Six Tastes ( அறுசுவை) are 1. Inippu (இனிப்பு ) - Sweet 2. pulippu ( புளிப்பு ) - Sour 3. kasappu (கசப்பு ) - Bitter 4. oovarppu ( உவர்ப்பு ) - Salty 5. thuvarppu ( துவர்ப்பு ) - Saline (eg) Betel leaf, pickle etc 6. kaarppu (கார்ப்பு ) - HOT (eg) Chilli
Yes, if the tasting happened in the past. If you're tasting it now, you would say 'It tastes so good'.
quinine is bitter when tasted........
Yes. Like he tasted the food. Or he tastes the food.
have u ever tasted a penis?? yes but i dont know any household items that it tastes like
i think it is he tastes' is right
acid tastes sour and can only be tasted on the sides of your tongue
iv never tasted it but my daughter said it tastes amazing others do not agree
Yes, it is. It tastes better than any other chocolate I've tasted too.
Because while most of us think that foods are only tasted through our taste-buds, the nose is where most foods get their taste. For example, when you have a cold, your nose is congested and you cannot breathe through it, so food does not have as much flavor. So when we say "that tastes like" whatever, we may not have tasted it but we have smelled it.
That is the correct spelling of tastes (plural noun, or form of verb to taste, to sample)
"taste" here is intransitive-- it is not active and you can not change it to passive. -- "taste" here means " has the taste" of - the is honey is not doing any tasting. If we change the sentence to; The bear tastes the honey, passive form would be The honey is tasted by the bear.
no, insulin has a strong smell though. my sister has diabetes.. but you wouldn't know what insulin tastes like. if you have tasted it, then your dead:P