Exact(26)
It's a kind of specific satiation, just as most people find room for dessert when they couldn't have another bite of their steak.
That's why they are called garden peach tomatoes; one bite of their rich, balanced sweetness and you know why the tomato is a fruit.
Now they must tap into municipal supplies, and that, Mrs. Taylor said, is taking a hefty bite of their household budget.
Brazilians are actually very hygiene-conscious and definitely don't want you to drink from their cup or take a bite of their sandwich]What Brazilians say (in strongly accented English, on first meeting a foreigner): Where is the book?
On coral reefs, fish that clean other fish for a living are more likely to do a good job at removing parasites, and less likely to take a bite of their customer, when other fish are watching.
Some apples, however, hang low in the tree, where men can easily walk by and pluck an apple off the tree and take a bite of their juicy flesh.
Similar(34)
She advises a clean mouth, a bit of anticipation, some sucking and biting of their lips and a relaxed tongue.
Some of the diners are foodies; they gush over the succulence of the duck breast and share bites of their cardamom-scented beignets.
Ms. Dennison walked the aisle with her Siberian husky named Ava, danced in her ice-white wedding dress from Milan and stuffed Mr. Taylor's face with bites of their towering choux à la crème wedding cake.
Twenty teachers had their teaching peer observed by trained Faculty members and gave an e-mail 'sound-bite' of their perceptions of the process.
The recession — and maybe their own spending — took too big a bite out of their balances.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com