it is the same thing in french porridge (I'm not lying) check wordreference.com and click on English to french
No, because the N sound isn't in porridge.
to say meatballs in french you say: boulettes
this is how you say it in french Sheila
You also say agenda in French!
grosse is how you say fat in french
Paw-ridge
Baby Bear's porridge was just right. (good temperature) I'm pretty sure he just says "Who ate my porridge or somebody's been eating my porridge!" when he discovers it gone.
porridge!
porridge...
(Some possible questions:) Do you like porridge? How long will porridge stay warm on a cold table?
Porridge has a very high viscosity unless you stir in a lot of water to thin it out. It's "speed" is very low, which is to say that it won't pour very well. There are a ton of variables that would have to be considered before making a test of the viscosity of porridge. You can vary the recipe for making porridge widely, and that would make it difficult to get consistent test results on the viscosity of porridge. The viscosity of water is a bit over 1cP, and olive oil is about 85 cP. Porridge would clock in at several hundred cP.
Porridge and haggis - but not on the same plate!
Cook up some porridge and pray to it to let it bless you with it's holy porridge powers...
Porridge has all properties of a liquid
Cook up some porridge and pray to it to let it bless you with it's holy porridge powers...
Antonym means "opposite", so not all words have good antonyms. Porridge is one of them, there is no word for anti-porridge.
No, because the N sound isn't in porridge.