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How To Use Sense of taste In A Sentence

  • Bad breath and a decreasing sense of taste and smell are common consequences.
  • Your skin is getting warmer and your sense of taste and smell have improved. The Sun
  • Even allowing for Will Fern's smock-frock, the usual garment of the rural labourer throughout the 19th c., the costumes of The Chimes reveal a consistent sense of taste, style, and design.
  • Also, my lack of sense of taste and smell means that I can't truly appreciate just how vile the office coffee is.
  • Since then, I have had no sense of taste or smell, which, as I am a food stylist and writer, has serious implications.
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  • My sense of taste isn't very good; I have a cold.
  • My sense of taste isn't very good; I have a cold.
  • When you substitute artificial sweetener for real sugar, however, the body learns it can no longer use its sense of taste to gauge calories.
  • The wines are fresh and intense sense of smell and surprising the sense of taste.
  • The least developed of all, in Tarzan, was the sense of taste, for he could eat luscious fruits, or raw flesh, long buried, with almost equal appreciation; but in that he differed but slightly from more civilized epicures.
  • His hearing was affected, and he had lost his sense of taste and smell.
  • his cold deprived him of his sense of taste
  • I stopped being able to produce saliva and my sense of taste disappeared. The Sun
  • My sense of taste isn't very good; I have a cold.
  • My sense of taste isn't very good; I have a cold.
  • Your skin is getting warmer and your sense of taste and smell have improved. The Sun
  • Like olfaction, the sense of taste is a chemical sense.
  • The most basic function of food preference, or sense of taste, is the ability to detect the almost indiscernible subtleties of the foods we eat.
  • My sense of taste isn't very good; I have a cold.
  • Unlike beer, which some wine aficionados describe as ‘the inebriant of the lout and half-wit’, wine requires drinkers to develop a complex sense of taste.
  • 'Of food' comprises the senses of smell and taste together: it denotes the sense of smell on the ground that that sense is connected with earth, which may be 'food,' and the sense of taste in so far as 'anna' may be also explained as that by means of which eating goes on (adyate). The Vedanta-Sutras with the Commentary by Ramanuja — Sacred Books of the East, Volume 48
  • I've got a cold and so I have no taste/have lost my sense of taste.
  • ONE of the things that is most depressing and disturbing about this whole green thing is that they seem to have no sense of taste at all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hunter frequently employed his sense of taste in dissection, and encouraged his pupils to do likewise, as he recorded matter-of-factly: ‘The gastric juice is a fluid somewhat transparent, and a little saltish or brackish to the taste.’
  • I've got a cold and so I have no taste/have lost my sense of taste.
  • The need to satisfy the sense of taste may be innate and important.
  • Your skin is getting warmer and your sense of taste and smell have improved. The Sun
  • Its own biological parts could survive on a puree of nutrients, but then it didn't have a " hindbrain " or a sense of taste the way she did. T2: INFILTRATOR
  • Much of this is to do with failing eyesight and a diminishing sense of taste and smell. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apart from the potatoes whose saffron flavour was deep and delicious, this dish was so bland it made me wonder if I had lost my sense of taste.
  • PEOPLE who take anti-depressants can see their sense of taste improved. The Sun
  • Most of what is commonly called the sense of taste is in fact the sense of smell, whether applied to wine, or any food or drink, since by chewing we transform our food into liquid which gives off smellable vapour.
  • It is a vision of horror that, while it might offend our sense of taste and decency, can ultimately only evoke our compassion.
  • He says that the attack, which left him with brain damage that robbed him of a sense of taste or smell, was completely unprovoked. Times, Sunday Times

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