The faculty of distinguishing sweet, sour, bitter, and salty properties in the mouth.
Sinônimos
Examples for "taste"
Examples for "taste"
1Consumers' taste for budget brands has been evident in recent company results.
2True Boers didn't need good taste; they had God on their side.
3This year, Ireland may have received a taste of things to come.
4Soups made with water or vegetable stock will, however, taste less complex.
5In excellent taste; it does the greatest possible credit to the designer.
1Taste identification and the gustation threshold scores were examined with validated filter paper strips.
2The ill-wishing Rose had again furnished a gourmet's meal, but Peter's preoccupation prevented its careful and appreciative gustation.
3The outer surface of the mammalian taste receptor cell is usually covered with saliva, which may affect the initial process of gustation.
1Now the sense of taste brought into full activity that of sight.
2Both the restaurant and the rooms reflect a refined sense of taste.
3Shall we seek happiness through the sense of taste or of touch?
4Others may experience alterations in their sense of taste, hearing, or body movements.
5About a quarter of the population has an especially sensitive sense of taste.
6The sense of taste is ruined by the stimulants put into the food.
7The sense of taste is as acute as all other sensations.
8The meds made me sleepy and robbed me of my sense of taste.
9Is the sense of taste a safe guide in choosing foods?
10As for his skinniness, he had been born with a sense of taste.
11What would it taste if it had a sense of taste?
12I recovered my sense of taste and smell a week later.
13She had lost her sense of taste and sense of smell.
14Unless, as often happens with people undergoing chemotherapy, you have no sense of taste.
15The sense of taste is the sense that a child likes best to use.
16Physiological factors and disease can affect our sense of taste, as can our experiences.
Translations for sense of taste