Seeing his pain caused me to cringe in sympathy as I imagined how bad he was hurting.
Binge, binges, cringe, cringes, singe, singes, tinge,
"Would you like to go to the store or not?" Would be the grammatically correct version I believe.
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
A Lead Sentence is a sentence that tells what the whole paragraph is going to be about or what might happen thoughout the story! ♥
a transitory sentence is a type of sentence that you can write.
A simple sentence: Blood makes me cringe.
You could see the boy cringe as he was about to get hit.
I cringe when I hear a squeaky hinge.
The very thought of eating a lemon makes me want to cringe.
Mary and Dennis ran up the trail and stopped short when Dennis spotted the snake: the sight of it made them both cringe in fear.
Here are a few examples:- She wore a purple skirt and bright green top she made me cringe When I watched my mom and dad dance I could do nothing but cringe The film made me cringe, I'm not going to see a horror film on my own again.
To cringe is like to wince. A person almost physically pulls away, as if encountering something painful or upsetting. Americans cringe at the thought of a Communist Vietnam means we wince, we shudder, we dread and cringe at the mention of Communism, which is so different from our Democratic society. Most Americans despise Communism, because it abuses power against its citizens.
Cringe is a verb meaning to shrink back in fear or disgust
a coward ...a coward would cringe in fear
That is the correct spelling of the verb, to cringe (to bend or shrink in fear, awe, or horror).
cringe
Cringe