== == yes he even walked her home yes he even walked her home yes he even walked her home yes he even walked her home yes he even walked her home
Any of the conjunctions could be grammatically correct, depending on what you're trying to say. If your meaning is "Even though he was exhausted, he walked all the way home," or, despite how tired he was, he still walked home, "but" is the appropriate conjunction. He was exhausted, but he walked all the way home. If you instead mean that the cause of his exhaustion was his walk home, "because" should be used. He was exhausted because he walked all the way home. "And" is probably the weakest choice of the three, but is still grammatically correct. It conveys a similar meaning to the sentence using "but." He was exhausted, and he walked all the way home.
Walked home from the convenience store.
Yes, but because of the introductory clause, we add a comma after 'snowing.' Therefore, the sentence becomes this: "Although it was snowing, he walked home." Then it's grammatically correct.
As I walked passed the post office I was stung by a bee.
Jefferson Pérez walked home to Ecuador after winning,;I'm not sure about losing.
Peacefully is an adverb. Example sentence: She peacefully walked home. Peacefully describes her walking manner. "Walked" in this sentence is the action word (verb), and words that modify or describe verbs are called adverbs. Peacefully she walked home. She walked peacefully home.
You were exhausted because you walked all the way home.
Scout walked Boo Radley home on page 372 of "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
'Home' is translated to 'Thuis' in dutch. However there are a few different translations when it comes to different situations. When you say: 'I am home' you say 'Ik ben thuis'. But when you say: 'I have a home' you say 'Ik heb een huis'. In the second sentence 'home' becomes 'huis'. To be more specific: When you mean the building of a home you say: 'Huis'. When you talk about a 'home sweet home'-home you say 'thuis'. ------- :)
If your trying to say my home, you say, chez moi.
Ow.