He lives on Second Street.
Cats have nine lives.
People whose lives are saved by others are indebted to them.
You use it to describe something that lives in trees.
The optimist always lives longer than the pessimist.
"He lives on 33 Meril Street, Cairo" might be acceptable in British usage. In American usage, "lives at" would be preferred.He lives on rice and beans.He lives on hope.
The eminent doctor developed a number of procedures for saving lives.
If global warming doesn't stop we will endanger the lives of many animals.
In recent days, many lives were lost because of a tornado.
you put lives into a sentence like this. for example:Sophie lives in Pennsylvania. so basically before a Pronoun
Example sentence - We knew our lives were in danger during the hurricane.
The present tense of the verb "live" in this sentence would be "lives." For example, "She lives with her parents."
(Make-believe is a noun or adjective meaning either imaginary or delusional.)She lives in a world of make-believe.Amos is her make-believe friend.
Maternal refers to your mother and paternal to your father. My maternal grandmother lives in Scotland, but my paternal grandmother lives just down the street.