Yes, there are tons of sentences that can include the word cornstalk. By my calculations, there are almost 10,000 sentences you can use, but here's only a few:
• "I'm going to go check on the cornstalk."
• "Did you remember to plant that corn so we can grow a cornstalk?"
•
The cornstalk swayed gently in the summer breeze, its leaves rustling softly in the sunlight.
The imperative mood is used to give commands or instructions. It is a direct way to communicate with someone and tell them what to do. In imperatives, the subject "you" is often implied and not stated in the sentence.
I should've studied for the exam last night instead of watching TV.
The verb in the sentence is "give." It is the action that the subject (you) is being asked to perform.
No, it is not proper grammar to say "someone and me" as the object of a sentence. The correct phrasing would be "someone and I," as in "John and I went to the store."
That sentence makes no sense, but, "Give you that disk, please."
A cornstalk plant has parallel veins.
Cornstalk means a type of crop or plant that are in grass or farms.
no
boystalk
heres that rabbit
I speculate that you are trying to get someone to do your homework.
She has showed kindness to someone who was upset.
his "ears" were hurting
My mother was knitting a scarf.
Competition is when you compete with someone.
My sorority club in college was Delta.
someone have want to live flake life.