It was an egregious mistake to wear jeans and a T-shirt to the formal wedding.
Sometimes I like to sit for a minute and contemplate my next chess move.
Sure! An example of homographs in a sentence is: "I saw a bat fly overhead, then I went to the store to buy a baseball bat." In this sentence, "bat" is a homograph as it has two different meanings but the same spelling.
I could write up several examples, for instance. For instance, this one here is a pretty good example. This other example has a sharper flavor, for instance.
Here are several sentence examples:"John was very agile - he could leap over several hurdles before he'd have to stop to catch his breath.""Agile in his youth, Mr. Pattenson no longer ran Cross Country - instead he's retired but he coaches the local high school Cross Country team."
Example sentence - The uproarious party could be heard several blocks away.
She and that fellow ought to be the sufferers,and they were in Itali.
There are several different ways to do this. You could make a compound sentence by combining them using and, or, but, or so. You could turn one of them into a subordinate clause and make a complex sentence.
I could write you as sentence but it would probably be an lousy example.
Some examples for oxymorons could be the little giants, pretty ugly, In a sentence, you could say that she was 'a little big'.
its raining out there will you please give me an umberalla?
One sentence could be, "The reconstruction after the Civil War is bound to last several years."
An egregious error in an English book could be a major grammatical mistake, such as using incorrect subject-verb agreement throughout the text. Another example could be consistently misspelling important terms or names. Additionally, misquoting a famous passage or misinterpreting a key literary reference would be considered a serious error.