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29 Sentences With "have an odor"

How to use have an odor in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "have an odor" and check conjugation/comparative form for "have an odor". Mastering all the usages of "have an odor" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But they are also body parts, so they're expected to have an odor.
Duck down gives you a nice cushioning, but it does sometimes have an odor to it.
Vitodeco's Luxury Leather Steering Wheel Coverdoesn't have an odor to it, which is especially nice inside an enclosed vehicle.
A. Insects have an odor-sensing system that is roughly analogous to that of vertebrates, according to "The Neurobiology of Olfaction," a survey published in 2010.
If you think you have an odor cloud following you around, you might be tempted to mask it with some perfume, cologne or even body spray.
In fact, sweat itself doesn't have an odor — bacteria (or the byproducts of bacteria) does, and it will feed off lipids and proteins in your sweat, secreting compounds that smell like onions or cheese.
Pros: Excellent price point for two goose down pillows, uses a high-quality pillow cover for comfort and breathability, very soft and comfortable, feathers will stay inside the pillow nicelyCons: Compresses too much for some people, may have an odor initially, higher percentage of feathers than down
The flowers have an odor similar to excrement and are pollinated by flies. It has a shallow root system.
Mature truffles have an odor resembling garlicky cheese, similar to mature Camembert. The species has been harvested for culinary purposes in Oregon.
It has gray underfur. The feet pads are reddish brown, and the forelimbs and hindlimbs are a dull reddish brown. The dense fur is thick and rougher than other rock hares. The flesh is reported to have an odor comparable to urine.
The flesh is firm and white. Fruit bodies have an odor that is strong and unpleasant, described as "sweet and nauseous". The odor has also been compared to that of "an old ham bone or soap" or "decaying protein", especially older specimens.
Gymnures have a very strong scent, typically described as a rancid garlic or onion smell, which is produced by its territory-marking scent glands. Several creatures similar in form and niche, such as the opossum and solenodon, have an odor similar to the gymnure's.
The mushrooms have an odor and taste comparable to radishes or almonds. The mushroom is inedible. The spore print is colored cinnamon to rusty brown. The spores are broadly egg-shaped in face view, and somewhat elliptical in side view, with a flattened suprahilar area; they have dimensions of 7-10 by 4-5 μm.
Salacia petenensis is a tropical tree native to Central America. It is found in cloud forests and along the eastern coast of Costa Rica at elevations of 1500 to 1700 m. It flowers from March through May and also in October and November. The flowers are tiny and have an odor like rotten fruit.
The cooked larvae are washed, sorted, and dried. Stored in a cool and dry place, they keep for at least a year and perhaps as long as two. The dried piuga are reconstituted before consumption by boiling for about an hour in plain or salted water. The boiled insects have an odor described as like that of cooked mushrooms.
The staminate inflorescences are panicles consisting of several erect catkins. The pistillate inflorescence is a terminal spike, which may be separate from the staminate inflorescence, or may be part of an androgynous panicle. The staminate inflorescences have an odor compared to the gardenia. The fruit is an oval nut, twice as long as wide, with a bitter meat.
The stem is solid (i.e., not hollow), firm, and measures long by thick. A thick, white, rubbery partial veil covers the gills of the immature mushroom, and eventually remains as a ring on the middle of the stem. Although the mushrooms sometimes have an odor that is briny or pungent ("though not inappropriate"), they are edible and good.
Yet another protection is their oily skin. Although they have no skin glands, their skin secretes an oily, bitter-tasting substance that acts as a natural raincoat in storms and fog. Streaks of this oily stuff can be seen where takins rub. They also have an odor that smells like a combination of horse and musk.
Hemizonia congesta is a spindly, thin-stemmed annual herb growing erect to in height. Like other tarweeds the stem and foliage are glandular and have an odor reminiscent of tar. Most of the long, narrow, pointed leaves are located on the lower portion of the stem below the branching flower stalks. The inflorescences are covered in glandular hairs and hold daisylike flower heads.
Ipomoea purga resin can be dissolved in either alcohol or diethyl ether. The resin that is insoluble in ether is odorless while the resin insoluble in alcohol does have an odor and is typically a brownish color. The convolvulinolic acid (C28H52O14)that is produced in Ipomoea purga can be broken down into a sugar molecule (C6H12O6) and a form of crystallized convolvulinolic acid (C16H30O3) when diluted.
The fruit bodies resembles those of L. rufus, but L. rufulus tends to grow in clusters at a common base, rather than solitarily or in groups. A distinguishing microscopic characteristic is the near absence of large, spherical cells called sphaerocysts that are otherwise common in Lactarius species. Lactarius rufulus mushrooms are edible, and have an odor resembling maple syrup. They have been used to flavor confections and desserts.
Arsenic has a similar electronegativity and ionization energies to its lighter congener phosphorus and accordingly readily forms covalent molecules with most of the nonmetals. Though stable in dry air, arsenic forms a golden-bronze tarnish upon exposure to humidity which eventually becomes a black surface layer.Greenwood and Earnshaw, pp. 552–4 When heated in air, arsenic oxidizes to arsenic trioxide; the fumes from this reaction have an odor resembling garlic.
Olfactory receptors (ORs), also known as odorant receptors, are expressed in the cell membranes of olfactory receptor neurons and are responsible for the detection of odorants (i.e., compounds that have an odor) which give rise to the sense of smell. Activated olfactory receptors trigger nerve impulses which transmit information about odor to the brain. These receptors are members of the class A rhodopsin-like family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs).
In the 1980s, its waters were noted to have an odor. The water temperature of Quaker Run in 1999 and 2000 ranged from at Ranshaw and was near Kulpmont. The discharge of the stream ranged from at Ranshaw, with an average of roughly , while the specific conductance ranged from 476 to 623 micro-siemens per centimeter at . Near Kulpmont, the discharge was and the specific conductance was 619 micro-siemens per centimeter at .
Although all individuals with ORS believe they have an odor, in some cases the individual reports they cannot perceive the odor themselves. In the latter cases, the belief arises via misinterpretation of the behavior of others or with the rationale that a disorder of smell which prevents self detection of the odor (i.e. anosmia) exists. In the cases where the non-existent odor can be detected, this is usually considered as phantosmia (olfactory hallucination).
As expected for a sulfide salt of alkaline earth, the sulfide hydrolyzes readily: :SrS + 2 H2O → Sr(OH)2 \+ H2S For this reason, samples of SrS have an odor of rotten eggs. Similar reactions are used in the production of commercially useful compounds, including the most useful strontium compound, strontium carbonate: a mixture of strontium sulfide with either carbon dioxide gas or sodium carbonate leads to formation of a precipitate of strontium carbonate. :SrS + H2O + CO2 → SrCO3 \+ H2S :SrS + Na2CO3 → SrCO3 \+ Na2S Strontium nitrate can also be prepared in this way.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. In fact, the synapomorphy of the Burseraceae is the smooth yet peeling or flaking aromatic bark. The clear, nonallergenic resins may smell like almonds, but at least the most well known resins, frankincense and myrrh, have an odor that is distinct from almonds, smelling like incense. The leaves are generally alternate, spiral, and odd-pinnately compound with opposite, frequently long- petiolulate, entire to serrate, pinnately veined leaflets whose symmetry is distinctive in some genera. However, some members are known to have trifoliate or unifoliate leaves.
The golden takin (pronounced tah- kin) is a large, muscular, hoofed mammal sometimes referred to as a goat- antelope, as it possesses similar traits to goats and antelope, and is most closely related to sheep, aoudad, or Barbary sheep of North Africa. Split hooves help takins move around easily in their rocky habitat. They also have an odor that smells like a strange combination of horse and musk. Both males and females have shiny black, crescent-shaped horns that grow from the center of their massive head and can reach up to 35 inches (90 centimeters) in length.
The most common non-latex condoms are made from polyurethane. Condoms may also be made from other synthetic materials, such as AT-10 resin, and most polyisoprene. Polyurethane condoms tend to be the same width and thickness as latex condoms, with most polyurethane condoms between 0.04 mm and 0.07 mm thick. Polyurethane can be considered better than latex in several ways: it conducts heat better than latex, is not as sensitive to temperature and ultraviolet light (and so has less rigid storage requirements and a longer shelf life), can be used with oil-based lubricants, is less allergenic than latex, and does not have an odor.

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