That's a great way to gate the cheese!
It depends on if you intend to use the word 'grate' as a verb or a noun. For example, you can grate cheese to make tacos or you can remove the grate from the mouth of a storm drain.
Hannah likes to grate cheese that tastes great!
Please hand me the cheese grater.
You should be very grateful for what you have.
grate The noodles are delicious because she tops them with freshly grated cheese. She will grate the cheese so the noodles will taste great.
great, grate
grate Did you grate that cheese yourself? Mom says it always tastes better than the bags of grated cheese purchased at the grocery store.
The most obvious words are the, great, and pumpkin. Other possible words include he, rate, grate, ate, pump, rump, and grin.
I think it's great that you know how to grate.
This is the finest fireplace cover I've ever seen; it's a great grate!
great. a grate is like a sewer grate or grating cheese.
You should be very grateful for what you have.
Example sentence - The grate in the road kept the cattle away from the highway.
The homophone for great is grate as in to grate or shred cheese.
The homonym for 'great' is 'grate.' 'Great' typically means large or significant, while 'grate' can refer to a frame of metal bars for holding coal or a feeling of irritation.
great grate, maybe
The word grate is a noun, meaning part of a fireplace.Example sentence: Jack put some kindling and a few logs on the grate.The word grate is also a verb: grate, grates, grating, grated.
Great is an anagram for grate; they are also homonyms.
The homophone for great is grate. Example, "I like to help my mum grate cheese".
The sewer grate had to be removed to rescue the lost kitten.