Yes, "chocolatey" is a real word, often used to describe something that has the flavor or characteristics of chocolate. It is commonly used in culinary contexts, such as describing desserts or beverages that contain chocolate. While it may not be found in all dictionaries, it is widely understood and used in everyday language.
Chocolatey...at least that is what the editing dept at my company has requested I use.
Yes, chocolatey (also chocolaty) is an adjective, generally used where the taste or appearance is being noted. The word chocolate itself is used as an adjective, where it refers to things made, flavored, or colored with chocolate. The color chocolate (brown) is an adjective when it is used with a noun.
No. English is not a gendered language.
It makes Japan chocolatey
His favorite food is chocolate because it's chocolatey :D
Morgan O'Neill (The one i am talking about) is nine year's old born on 19th of Feb 2002. She has chocolatey hair and chocolatey eyes too, and her skin colour is mixtrace.
The adjective form of "chocolate" is "chocolatey" (or "chocolaty" in some variations). It describes something that has the flavor or characteristics of chocolate. For example, you might refer to a dessert as having a chocolatey taste.
Yes. While both are variants the spelling chocolatey is often considered wrong.The reason you see the adjective "chocolaty" is because of US product labeling rules. By law, a product that does not contain a specified amount of actual "chocolate" cannot use the words "chocolate" or "chocolatey".
Chocolate because it's "chocolatey"
Chocolate because it's chocolatey! <3
He likes chocolate. "Because it's chocolatey"
"Real" is the root word of "really".