English, asked by sakthidhasmanekshah, 2 days ago

diffrence between saccharin and sugar ​

Answers

Answered by lailadharani
2

Answer:

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Answered by kmpartha
0

Answer:

Because this question is in the English subject, I'm assuming you aren't talking about the chemical element.

Saccharine means either sugary or over-sentimental/over-emotional.

Sugar is... sugar.

Saccharin is almost exclusively used as an adjective, the noun form is another word for saccharin, a chemical substance. Sugar, on the other hand is a noun, sugary is the adjective form.

TL;DR: Saccharin is sugary. Sugar is only the noun form of sugary. Other than that, they don't have much of a difference.

F.Y.I Saccharin (without an e in the end) the noun a.k.a saccharine (with an e) is an artificial compound which is used as a substitute for sugar in chemical terms.

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