I want to eat a cookie.
Please give me a cookie.
This cookie just came out of the oven.
What a delicious cookie!
I'm just thankful that the proverbial cookie crumbled in my favor.
My cookie-cutter is stelliform shaped.
quickly eating the last cookie
brought is the action verb
Well, it can't be in the subject of the sentence, for example [Yummy is this cookie.]The subject is usually in the predicate. But there are exceptions to every rule. Almost every.
i need flour for the cookie dough
I snagged a cookie from the countertop, where it lay, unattended.
The cookie jar was open and he took one of the cookies.
you could use itm like the=at movie was sweet or that cookie was sweet
He had seven cars, but the bank repossessed five of them. He had a cookie, but someone ate it.
I was feeling generous, so I gave her the last cookie.
A persistent cookie is a small text file stored on your hard drive for an extended period of time.Eating a cookie is not always the best way to satisfy your appetite.
Elmo was playing pirate and stole one of cookie monster's cookie's so he locked him up in a prison ship.
my little runt of a brother stole mi cookie. IDK How about "You get back here you little runt!". That's how I use it in a sentence.
i HAVE a cookie I HAVE $100 he HAS a cookie she HAS $100 You use "have" with most pronouns and plural nouns. "I, you, we, etc." You use "has" with third person singular. "He, she, it"
Is
It is appropriate in some situations. There are two ways to use "its": as a possessive or as a contraction. When you use it as a possessive, there is no apostrophe. For example: The dog wants its bone. When you use it as a contraction, you use "it's." For example: It's my cookie. The sentence could also be read as it "It is my cookie;" therefore, "it's" is a contraction in this sentence and requires an apostrophe.