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Reegis Posted 7 years ago
Vocabulary

Can you cut the baking sheet into pieces and then put them in the pans?

Hello.

I saw the following sentence:

Can you cut the baking sheet into pieces and then put them in the pans? Is it grammatically correct? Especially I am interested in 'baking sheet' as I associate this word with something made of metal rather than paper that can be cut. Can it mean kind of a paper too?The terminology I am familiar with: baking tray = cookie sheet = tray made of metal for cooking, baking paper = parchment paper = paper used for cooking. For some reason 'enters' don't work in this post and don't move sentences to new lines, so I am sorry for lack of readability.
  

Top answer

When I see "baking sheet" I don't know what it is, but I assume it must be a flat piece of metal to bake things on. I know what a cookie sheet is (and I can't find one anywhere). It would never occur to me that it might be paper.

  • When I see "baking sheet" I don't know what it is, but I assume it must be a flat piece of metal to bake things on.
  • I know what a cookie sheet is (and I can't find one anywhere).
  • It would never occur to me that it might be paper.
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1 Answers
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When I see "baking sheet" I don't know what it is, but I assume it must be a flat piece of metal to bake things on. I know what a cookie sheet is (and I can't find one anywhere). It would never occur to me that it might be paper.

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