No we shouldn't
Becuase if we keep them on a fish and chips they do they will grow very strong and tall.
If we dont feed them chips they will get very thin like a rat
So basically KEEP FEEDING YOUR KIDS GREASY FOODS!!
Depends if you are referring to English style chips or crisps -(American chips )
Lays chips is a mixture, not a compound.
Porcelain chips are used to avoid splashing during boiling of liquids.
If Erica replaces two thirds of a cup of chocolate chips with nuts, she needs 2/3 cup less of chocolate chips. To find out how much chocolate chips she still needs, subtract 2/3 cup from the original 2 cups, which equals 1 and 1/3 cups of chocolate chips she still needs to put in the cookies.
Chips packets are filled with aluminum to protect the chips from light, moisture, and oxygen, which can affect their taste and shelf life. The aluminum acts as a barrier to maintain the freshness and crispiness of the chips inside the packet.
should we give children chips and crisp?
Gordon brown flavoured crisps taste of lies
As long as their diet is mostly nutritional haelthy food then, it is okay to occasionally treat them.
chips a packet of crisps is ein tute chips
Crisps are called 'chips' in French. This is a feminine noun.
chips=frenchfries crisps=potatochips
Children love chips, eating chips at least twice a week will do no harm, making sure your children have a balanced diet is the most important thing to do, therefore, for the rest of the week concentrate of potatoes, three veg and whatever meat or chicken you and your family like.
There is a grammatical error in the sentence, "A packet of crisps were found on the bench." The subject in the sentence is "packet of chips" and not just the word "chips". Therefore, the sentence should be written as, "A packet of crisps was found on the bench.".
"Cheap as chips" refers to crisps.
No! We only use "crisps" for what you call potato chips.
"Crisps" in French is spelled "chips".
'Chips' as in 'fish and chips' is sceallóga. The American 'potato chips' are called 'crisps' in Ireland and that's brioscaí (prátaí).