How does it taste?

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Nightmare85

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Jul 17, 2009
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Interested in Language
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German
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Germany
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Germany
Hello,
I'm thinking about replacing the second taste with another word.
Me: How does it taste?
He: What?
Me: The taste of the loss.
:-D

I know that the first taste is a verb and the second one a noun, but I would like to replace it anyway.

And if I wrote just one sentence, it would sound way more odd:
How does the taste of the loss taste? -> not very good this twice taste

Would flavo(u)r be better as a noun in both examples?

Cheers!
 

emsr2d2

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Jul 28, 2009
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English Teacher
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British English
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UK
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UK
Hello,
I'm thinking about replacing the second taste with another word.
Me: How does it taste?
He: What?
Me: The taste of the loss.
:-D

I know that the first taste is a verb and the second one a noun, but I would like to replace it anyway.

And if I wrote just one sentence, it would sound way more odd:
How does the taste of the loss taste? -> not very good this twice taste

Would flavo(u)r be better as a noun in both examples?

Cheers!

As one sentence, you could say "What does loss taste like?" or "How does loss taste?"

I think "loss" here is a collective noun, so you wouldn't need "the loss", just "loss". You are talking about the taste of loss generally.

However, if you want to leave it as 3 sentences, the final answer doesn't need to be quite so wordy:

"How does it taste?"
"What?"
"Loss."
 
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