
Home-made vs Home-cooked | WordReference Forums
Dec 4, 2017 · Chocolate isn't a good example although chocolates plural might work. Few people make chocolates at home and it isn't exactly cooked. Some things are called 'homemade', …
homemade vs. handmade | WordReference Forums
Jan 9, 2011 · Well, "homemade" means "made at home" while "handmade" means made by hand, not by a machine. Many "homemade" items are also "handmade," because people who …
homemade dish = home-style dish? | WordReference Forums
Apr 7, 2014 · Is a homemade dish = home-style dish? What do you call: 1. a dish someone who cooked at home? A home-cooked dish or a homemade dish? 2. a popular dish that people …
Possessive - or not? Visitors, Visitor's or Visitors' guide {+ center ...
Jan 24, 2025 · The free event – which runs from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. – will see vendors set up throughout the provincial park's visitors' centre and across the west lawn selling a host of …
Gerund, infinitive: I like <cooking, to cook>.
Jun 18, 2006 · 1) I like to cook for my family you don't necessarily imply that you enojy the act of cooking per se (maybe you simply prefer homemade food to processed industrial food, that's …
zinger-slinging, rough around-the edges - WordReference Forums
Jun 9, 2023 · 'Zinger-slinging' seems to be a play on 'gunslinging' but instead of being quick with bullets, she's quick with ' zingers '. She could be described as a wisecracking tomboy. 'Rough …
Friselina - WordReference Forums
Apr 13, 2020 · Context: A short video comparing the effectiveness of different face masks, surgical masks, homemade masks, and N 95 masks. It seems like the Spanish-speaker was …
Crushed vs Ground vs Minced - WordReference Forums
Jul 15, 2009 · Hi, I agree with your attempt: "macinato a pezzi" indicates pieces of middle size, not grounded nor minced, so I think crushed is the more suitable. "casereccio" means homemade, …
"I've made..." or "I made..."? | WordReference Forums
May 12, 2017 · In the context we're given here, which is actually serving the homemade cakes for the person to eat, I'd go for the perfect tense in BE: I've made some cakes for you.
Believe in/ believe on | WordReference Forums
May 2, 2017 · I've never seen "believe on" except in the KJV (Acts 16:31). I also have seen it on homemade billboards in rural Indiana and on bumper stickers like the one in #6, which refer to …