1. The dog is black and white.

2. There are two black and white dogs in the kennel.
3. There are two black-and- white dogs in the kennel.

(Are they all grammatical?)

4. The food is a littel too spicy but delicious.

5. The food is a little spicy and delicious.

6. How does the food taste?
- It tastes a little bitter but yummy.

7. How does the food taste like?
- It is kind of salty and spicy.

8. The food is sour and rather/somewhat salty.

(Are they all grammatical? Would you check each sentence? Thank you.)

1 and 3 are correct; 2 is almost correct.

4. Correct the spelling of "little"

5. OK

6. OK

7. Delete "like" and change "kind of" to "rather" or "somewhat"

8. OK

1. The sentence "The dog is black and white" is grammatically correct. It describes the color of the dog.

2. The sentence "There are two black and white dogs in the kennel" is also grammatically correct. It describes the presence of two dogs with a black and white color pattern.

3. The sentence "There are two black-and-white dogs in the kennel" is also grammatically correct. It combines "black" and "white" with a hyphen to create a compound adjective that describes the color pattern of the dogs.

4. The sentence "The food is a littel too spicy but delicious" contains a typo. The correct spelling is "little."

5. The sentence "The food is a little spicy and delicious" is grammatically correct. It describes the spiciness and deliciousness of the food.

6. The question "How does the food taste?" is grammatically correct. It asks about the taste of the food.

7. The question "How does the food taste like?" is not grammatically correct. The correct wording would be "How does the food taste?" or "What does the food taste like?"

8. The sentence "The food is sour and rather/somewhat salty" is grammatically correct. It describes the sourness and saltiness of the food, using the modifiers "rather" or "somewhat" to express a degree or level of the qualities.