Chromium is a mineral that some people may find hard to swallow due to its metallic taste. It is present in trace amounts in most vegetables and is essential for maintaining normal blood sugar levels.
That metal sounds a lot like aluminum.
Conchoidal describes a smooth, curved fracture surface similar to broken glass. Splintery texture refers to long, thin, and sharp pieces that break off a mineral. Irregular texture indicates a lack of a specific pattern or shape in the mineral's fracture.
The mixture you are describing sounds like soil, which consists of mineral and rock particles, organic matter from decaying organisms, water, and air. Soil is vital for supporting plant growth and providing nutrients for ecosystems.
The mineral you're referring to is likely "talc." The name "talc" can be broken down into "tal" (which sounds like "tall") and "c," which can represent "see," hinting at the idea of art or vision. Talc is known for its softness and is commonly used in talcum powder, as well as in art materials like chalk and crayons. Its unique properties make it a significant mineral in various artistic applications.
The vegetable that shares its name with a human body part is "artichoke." While it is primarily known as a vegetable, the term "choke" in "artichoke" refers to a part of the plant rather than a human body part, but it is often humorously associated with the act of choking. However, another example is "beet," which can refer to "beetroot" and sounds similar to "beat," as in a heartbeat, but it doesn't directly name a body part. Overall, vegetables like "chickpeas" may also loosely fit the criteria through playful language, but the connection can be more abstract.
leek
The letter that sounds like a vegetable is the letter "P", because pea sounds like the letter p.
A homophone for a red vegetable is "beet" which sounds like "beat."
A leek
A fun way to answer this is to ask a sister or brother to say the alphabet and see which letter sounds like a vegetable. Words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings are called homonyms. "Hair" and "hare", "fair" and "fare", "night" and "knight", "bury" and "berry" are homonyms. "P" is a letter that sounds like a vegetable - the pea.
Well It Is Unique. Although, Sounds Like A Vegetable.
they are chokos by the sounds of it
This has to be a misspelling of something. Can you confirm the spelling, it sounds like the name of a mineral.
The Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic rocks.
Mike Nawrocki,Veggie Tale's Co-Founder
By the way it sounds ....No to be crude or gross ...it probably has to do with oral sex
A vegetable that starts with h would be horseradish. That is the only vegetable that I can find that begins with the letter h.