Tasted
in sentence
110 examples of Tasted in a sentence
No, I actually fell out of love with this fish because, I swear to God, after that conversation, the fish
tasted
like chicken.
Yet, when I
tasted
it at that restaurant in southern Spain, it
tasted
not at all like fish skin.
It
tasted
sweet and clean, like you were taking a bite of the ocean.
And they
tasted
really good.
I don't know.. it was like a tasty bubble gum that seemed to run out of flavor yet you continue to chew on it because it once
tasted
great.
And the french chef, who has apparently never seen or
tasted
a hamburger...
This movie came aside as a shock in the eighties.Far from trends,that is to say in the heart of sincere creativity,Babettes gaestebud stands as one of the finest movies of its time.Stephane Audran,the wonderful actress of her ex-husband Claude Chabrol's greatest achievements (le boucher,la rupture,les noces rouges,all unqualified musts for movie buffs)gave a lifetime performance.To see her prepare with love and affection her meal is a feast for the eyes.All the people who saw this masterpiece actually tasted,ate Babette's culinary triumph.
I loved the scene where he
tasted
the sauce in the pot because thats how most people cook lol.
After he emerged from the underground, Waters produced trash-lite versions of his earlier works ("Cry Baby", "Polyester", Hairspray") that to die-hard fans looked and
tasted
like watered down liqueur.
Apparently there is some party scene where they are all drinking beer, (which they told me was colored water,
tasted
disgusting, and was very hard to keep swallowing over and over again, especially in the funnel scenes).
One of the most intriguing phenomena to watch is how his character grows into the bold and confident president one would expect of one who has
tasted
the power of the office.
Children of Glory is supposed to render not just an utterly important event in Hungarian history but also how life
tasted
in an era of exasperation and unrest.
His thesis was that once people have
tasted
freedom, once the oppressive leader is gone, they will naturally live as free people and build a new, democratic society without much central oversight.
Unfortunately for many African countries, freedom and independence ended up in the hands of a few who had
tasted
and become addicted to the repressive practices that Africans had spent decades fighting.
The Shia parties, having
tasted
real power in Iraq for the first time, are now attempting to create a much more centralized state than either the Kurds or Sunni Iraqis – or the constitution, for that matter – will tolerate.
This may sound like pie in the sky, but we have already
tasted
it in Africa, where Sierra Leone’s Agenda for Prosperity 2013-2017 and the Liberia Vision 2030 exemplify the potential of such programs.
After eight years of international administration, Kosovo’s Albanian majority has
tasted
freedom and is eager for full independence.
Terrorists who have
tasted
success in Iraq will increasingly turn on others.
Similarly Hezbollah, having
tasted
the sense but not the reality of victory (and egged on by Syria and Iran) may prove recalcitrant.
Or you may have
tasted
its outstanding cuisine.
Grassroots democracy may at present be limited to the village level, but the Chinese people have
tasted
democracy and self-governance for the first time and like it.
'On the other hand, your pickling is such that Mama says she never
tasted
anything like it!' she added, smiling and putting the old woman's kerchief straight.
I never
tasted
better!
But they
tasted
in this one more joy; they thought nothing too good for their daughter, although they had such a horror of display that they had preserved the fashions of their youth.
And, in fact, he
tasted
a certain comfort in the bottom of this hole; the heat was not too great, an equal temperature reigned here at all seasons, the warmth of a bath, while the rough December wind was chapping the skins of the miserable people on the earth.
The little town, sick at heart, which had not dared hitherto to rejoice over the massacre, now breathed again, and
tasted
the joy of being saved.
"It must have
tasted
pretty bad," Ned Land added.
Because, frankly, it
tasted
like leather.
She had never seen pomegranates nor
tasted
pineapples.
He gave Madame Bovary information as to the trades-people, sent expressly for his own cider merchant,
tasted
the drink himself, and saw that the casks were properly placed in the cellar; he explained how to set about getting in a supply of butter cheap, and made an arrangement with Lestiboudois, the sacristan, who, besides his sacerdotal and funeral functions, looked after the principal gardens at Yonville by the hour or the year, according to the taste of the customers.
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