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Discover LudwigThe phrase "tastes divine" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It expresses a feeling of enjoyment or pleasure in the way something tastes. Example: "The chocolate cake at this bakery tastes divine, with its rich and velvety texture and perfect balance of sweetness."
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While I am fasting, food smells more tantalising, the taste buds are extremely sensitive and food tastes divine.
(Its drier flavor is ideal for treacly grilled peaches and apricots.) We've never had much luck with fig ice cream, which flatters neither figs nor cream, but a simple stewed fig topping with lemon juice and sugar, spooned over sour cream ice cream, tastes divine.
It looks fancy, tastes divine and provides a sweet treat alternative without the dairy and preservatives.
Similar(57)
It tasted divine.
They taste divine.
His chic chocolates are works of art, but they also taste divine.
Its range runs from prepped sauces to fist-sized green kumatos that look like the product of a minor nuclear fallout, but taste divine.
It has lots of great chicken choices, but the best was the chicken and chorizo poutine, which came as a very hearty portion and tasted divine.
The flour came out very coarse but we mixed it with water and some salt and let it stand, baked it in an old wood stove and it tasted divine.
A monkey can scream to warn its troopmates of an approaching predator, or alert them to a cache of tasty food, but it can't communicate something like "doesn't that hawk have a funny looking beak?" or "with a little salt, this fig would taste divine".
No matter when or why you eat them, they will always taste divine.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com