Yes! You need your sense of smell in order to taste. If you go to the related link (Science Kids), this will take you to an experiment that you can do that might help you understand this better.
Your taste buds can't taste themselves but as gross as it sounds, if you eat other taste buds you will be able to taste them. Don't ask me what they taste like though because I don't know and don't want to.
no, the taste buds only detect - sweet/salt/bitter/sour but the smell of foods is closely related to taste - try plugging up your nose and eating your favorite food - not fun
yes you can there the bumps on your tongue.
it taste just like chicken and sand
yes
The sense of smell and taste are closely intertwined. When nasal congestion occurs during a cold, the taste you have can be affected to where you can only have the base tastes of salty, sweet, bitter, or sour.
It causes brain damage
It is that your taste buds are less sensitive
the sense of taste begins with the taste buds on the tongue and othere receptor cells are found on the throat
The sense of taste is centered around the tongue. Cleft Palate doesn't really affect the tongue, and as such, sense of taste isn't affected. So yes, if you have a cleft palate, you can still taste food.
You have taste buds in your mouth that make it possible for you to sense taste.
Flavor and taste buds can be used when referring to sense of taste. Sense of taste can also be referred to as your taste buds. Taste buds can be used in place of the term, sense of taste.
sense of smell
Sense of taste is largely affected by the sense of smell. So outside odors will positively or negatively affect the sense of taste.
Smell is an important part of taste. without smell you would not taste anything. So if you don't have a sense of smell you won't have the sense of taste eather.
"Taste buds" is the common name for the nerve endings for the sense of taste.
Gustation is the sense of taste.
no
Yes. Thier sense of taste is just like ours.
Your sense of taste is one of the 5 human senes. It allows us to know- through the taste buds on our tongue- what things.. well, taste like. It lets us determine it's flavor.
The sense of smell and taste are closely intertwined. When nasal congestion occurs during a cold, the taste you have can be affected to where you can only have the base tastes of salty, sweet, bitter, or sour.
no