Flavoured vs Flavour - What's the difference?
flavoured | flavour | Derived terms |
Having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring.
(flavour)
The quality produced by the sensation of taste or, especially, of taste and smell in combined effect.
A substance used to produce a taste. Flavouring.
A variety (of taste) attributed to an object.
The characteristic quality of something.
(informal) A kind or type.
(physics) One of the six types of quarks (top, bottom, strange, charmed, up, and down) or three types of leptons (electron, muon, and tauon).
(archaic) The quality produced by the sensation of smell; odour; fragrance.
Flavour is a derived term of flavoured.
As verbs the difference between flavoured and flavour
is that flavoured is past tense of flavour while flavour is to add flavouring to something.As an adjective flavoured
is having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring.As a noun flavour is
the quality produced by the sensation of taste or, especially, of taste and smell in combined effect.flavoured
English
Alternative forms
* flavored (American spelling)Adjective
(en adjective)- This is only grape flavoured soda, the flavouring is artificial; real grape juice tastes much richer.
Verb
(head)flavour
English
(wikipedia flavour)Alternative forms
* flavor (American spelling)Noun
(en noun)- The flavour of this apple pie is delicious.
- Flavour was added to the pudding.
- What flavour of bubble gum do you enjoy?
- the flavour of an experience
- Debian is one flavour of the Linux operating system.
- the flavour of a rose
