No. If I get the gist of your meaning, I'd probably say (2 dogs, right)?: the names of my dogs are ruby and Oliver; my cat's name is smokey.
This sentence does not make much sense, but it means black my cousins dog.
That really doesn't make sense. You can multiply numbers, and certain other mathematical objects (such as matrices). For this to make sense, you would need a rule to assign numbers (or matrices, or whatever) to the llama and to the color yellow.
It means The dog is in the park in the road, it doesn't make sense to me but there you go.
Llamas were essential to the Incas for transportation of goods and people across the Andes mountains. They also provided wool, meat, and hides for the Inca people. Llamas were a vital part of the Inca economy and cultural practices.
Oliver ran away because he felt misunderstood and unappreciated at home. He may have been seeking independence, adventure, or a sense of belonging elsewhere.
It's llama You're right, it is a llama. I am assuming that you (this reader) knows what a llama is. A suri llama is a type of llama that differs it from the normal llamas by it's fleece. Normal llamas have fleece that is similar in looks as a sheep's wool, though llama fleece doesn't have lanolin (the type of oil in sheep's wool) in it, so it is not possible to have an allergic reaction to there fleece as some people do of wool. Anyway, "normal llamas" are called silky, because of their fleece. But suri fleece is much like a mop dog's hair. It is in beautiful locks of hair that are very separated like. It is not just a huge Afro kind-of-thing like on sheep. Suri is also MUCH heavier than regular silky (Huycaya on an alpaca). If you have a bag of suri and a bag of silky fiber that weighed the same the suri would be about ten times heavier. On the pictures you can actually see how the suri fleece is heavier by the way it hangs and doesn't puff. This is a silky llama: This is a suri llama: I know that it doesn't make sense that a suri llama is more silky feeling than a silky llama, but not everything in the world makes sense. This image below is actually an alpaca, but both llamas and alpacas have suri fleece, and this was just an awesome example of suri fiber.
This question makes no sense. Rewrite it with proper spelling as well.
no he doesn't, at the end of the film sheriff Justice is still "in hot pursuit" but in a Greyhound Bus, do to his car being totaled a few sense prior.
An orphan. Oliver was protrayed by Dickens as a strong but sweet-tempered child, naive and trusting, intelligent beyond his education, and inbued with a sense of honour and justice that was never taught him by word or example.
Dickens uses Satire (the use of irony or sense of humor(i think)). He has Sarcasm and Exaggeration.
The words Yeolla Daebak are not translatable into English. It is not clear if it is correct grammar or not.
Mr. Oliver lives in Shimla to escape his past and start a new life. Shimla's serene and secluded environment provides him with a sense of peace and distance from his previous troubles, allowing him to find solace and contemplation in the quiet surroundings of the hills.