yes
Calvin Klien's Obsession for teeth.
The smell of roting vegetation.
diamonds smell like the mine that they were from
You can smell...... snails, polluotion and metal
the 'smell' is alluding to something wrong, not an actual odor- Ex- when you smell something fishy going on- it doesn't actually mean you smell flounder Hamlet quotes- "There is something rotten in the state of Denmark" "The old chief will wear his feathers, ride his pony and eat his corn when you smell the flowers that they put on your grave"
Halitosis
Odor, or stench
Calvin Klien's Obsession for teeth.
The Simpsons - 1989 Bart Stops to Smell the Roosevelts 23-2 was released on: USA: 2 October 2011 Hungary: 28 October 2012
The smell in Miss Emily's house was caused by the decaying body of her former lover, Homer Barron, which she had kept in her bedroom for years. She likely did this to preserve the memory of their time together and to keep him close to her.
Emily's purchase of arsenic, which is commonly used for poisoning. The strong foul smell coming from Emily's house after Homer's disappearance. Homer's sudden disappearance after entering Emily's house. No sightings or whereabouts of Homer after he entered Emily's home. The discovery of Homer's decomposed remains in Emily's bedroom many years later.
Homer disappeared after supposedly being engaged to Emily, Emily bought arsenic, and a foul smell was coming from Emily's house. Because of the non-chronological order of the story, it's hard to link these events until the end.
The judge suggests that the smell in "A Rose for Emily" was likely caused by the decaying body of Homer Barron, Emily's former lover, which she kept in her house after his death.
sour siesle im baked off it right now
I causes a constant allergic reaction in the upper respiratory tract, leading to chronic inflammations, thus affecting the smell sense, which means causing damage to your olfactory system.
They are complaining about the smell coming from Miss Emily's house, which is in fact the decomposing body of Homer Baron.
Because your nose gets confused. You can restart a new scent by sniffing the back of your hand and then smelling something different. When perfume testing, once you smell one, sniff the back of your hand, because your nose is used to the smell of your skin, and acts as a restart, and then smell the next product.