Dark hair mixed with grey hairs....black & white
Pepper is 胡椒 (hu2 jiao1) This is the black peppercorn, so it's pepper as in 'salt and pepper'
sel et poivre
A thin, wispy beard that is hardly big enough to call a beard.
Yes, salt is soluble in water but pepper is a complex mixture of organic chemicals, some of which are not soluble in water at all.
paul McCartney misheard somone say salt and pepper and thought they said sgt. pepper and he was like wtf?
le sel et le poivre
The phrase "salt and pepper" is commonly used in English due to historical and cultural conventions, where salt was often considered the primary seasoning essential for food preservation and flavor. The order reflects this importance, with salt typically being mentioned first. Additionally, the phrase has become idiomatic, reinforcing its usage in that sequence over time. As a result, "salt and pepper" has become the standard expression in culinary contexts.
If you mean salt & pepper in the same container, I would say heterogeneous mixture, but salt by itself would be a compount (NaCl?), while pepper would likely be a homogeneous mixture (milled black pepper).
Not exactly sure. Both salt and pepper have been cultivated for the past 4000 years (by the Assyrians and Indians, respectively). However salt comes from rock, whereas pepper comes from a plant that must be ground before use. I would say salt.
yellow pepper is "poivre jaune" (i deleted "bonjour" mean hello :/ )
You would say: Sal de Lima or Sal de Limon Miguel V.
You need to determine what you think will melt the fastest, and that will be your hypothesis. If you think that pepper will melt it faster, you would say "My hypothesis is that the pepper will melt ice faster than the other variables (sand, salt, and sugar)."