The word 'sweet' is an adjective or a noun, depending on use:
Adjective: Would you like sweet tea with your sweet cake?
Noun: No thank you, my sweet, I prefer coffee with a sweet.
The word "sugar" has a beginning sound that is sweet.
There are four phonemes in the word "sweet" (/s/ /w/ /iy/ /t/).
sweet γλυκό (gliko) dissolve διαλύω (dialio)
Melys (flavour).
The word for sweet in Hindi is "मिठा" (mitha).
A noun, of the abstract type, the name of an intangible quality.
The opposite word of bitter is sweet, and the opposite word of sour is sweet.
The Hawaiian word for sweet is "momona" or "onaona".Occasionally, Hawaiians get annoyed when words are pronounced incorrectly. This is due to the fact that if one was to say a word incorrectly they could be talking about something else in the language.Here the Hawaiian word momona means sweet, or sweet-tasting fat (as in meat fat that makes a meal delicious). On the other hand onaona is referring to another type of sweet. The sweet that this words describes is a sweet smell or fragrance (such as a flower or pua)
A sweet word is cornball.
A better word for "sweet" is "sugary."
The biggest possible word I can think of for sweet is sacchariferous
The word "sugar" has a beginning sound that is sweet.
Yes, the noun 'sweet' is a concrete noun, a word for something that tastes sweet or a term of endearment for a person (Sweets for my sweet); a word for a physical person or thing.The word 'sweet' is also an adjective.
The word 'sweet' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'sweet' is a word for a taste or quality; a word for a food with a high sugar content; a word for something pleasing to the mind or feelings; a word for a thing.The noun form of the adjective 'sweet' is sweetness.
the word shining you in sweet home ablabama
The sweet potato has natural sugars in it that makes it sweet to the taste.
The word 'sweetness' is the abstract noun form for the adjective sweet. The word 'sweet' is also a noun, a concrete noun a word for something that is sweet and a synonym for candy, cookie, cake, etc.