Do you mean "dyed" or "died? Ie: She dyed her hair yesterday. OR... She died yesterday.
You can say "she dyed" as 'elle a teint' in French, 'ella tintó' in Spanish, 'ella tingió' in Italian, and 'sie hat gefärbt' in German.
The past participle tense of "dye" is "dyed." For example, "I dyed my hair yesterday."
The past tense of "dye" is "dyed."
The present tense - dye or dyes (3rd person singular). The present continuous - is dyeing The present perfect - have dyed / has dyed The present perfect continuous - have been dyeing/ has been dyeing
To say "What did he say?" in Twi, you would say, "Ahia bꜛra bꜛini?"
The future tense of "say" is "will say." For example, "I will say goodbye before I leave."
Дедушка (pronounced 'dyed-ooshka')
Sandra's hair was actually dyed blond. Her family didn't like it and neither did she. Needless to say, after the movie she dyed it back brunette.
Dyed is a verb (past tense of dye) and an adjective (dyed hair).
Dyed jade will not have the same esoteric qualities as jade that has not been dyed. If it is looked at through a Chelsea filter, dyed jade will have a red coloring to it.
I think that only lady Gaga knows why she dyed her hair blonde. But alot of people say that she dyed her hair because she looked like Amy Winehouse.
the fabric weave by dyed yarn called yarn dyed fabric
the effect on dyed materials is
The past participle tense of "dye" is "dyed." For example, "I dyed my hair yesterday."
They are dyed red orriginally.
it matters how many you make say if you dyed 20 the you he would give you at least 27
Yes selena gomez has dyed her hair
yes although sometimes they can leave streaks of your real hair color. that all depends on how it was dyed and who dyed it