You have spelled the word "buried" correctly (past tense of to bury).
That is the correct spelling of the verb "bury" (put underground, or underneath).
The sound-alike word is "berry" (type of fruit).
That is the correct spelling of "burying" (entombing, or hiding).
You have spelt the word "buried" correctly (past tense of to bury).
Bury.
The place where the dead are buried is a cemetery.
The likely word is "buried" (put underground, or under other similar materials).
The easy way to remember is this little saying: Edward Died In November Buried under Robert Grahams House.
Yes but you spell it tidied.For verbs ending in -y when you add -ed the 'y changes to i'eg bury - buried / marry - married
There are homophones (sound-alike words):buries (verb) - from to bury, to place underground or hideberries (noun) - plural of berry, more than one small fruit
Buried
The past tense of "bury" is "buried".
The place where the dead are buried is a cemetery.
Not sure how to spell his name but I believe it was Lafayette
The likely word is "buried" (put underground, or under other similar materials).
Those letters spell the word furniture.
The likely word is instead (in place of).A similar word is the word interred, meaning buried.
By pronunciation, this could be the word "buried" (interred, entombed).Similar-sounding words are parity and verity.
It is unclear what you are asking because you did not use the spell check program. Are you asking about when he was MARRIED or when he was BURIED?
The proper name is spelled Pompeii, a Roman city near Naples that was destroyed and buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.
The synonyms for "buried" include entombed or enshrined (these may also be applied to above-ground burial, in a crypt or mausoleum).
It it's a name, it's Barry.If it's a fruit, it's berry.If you're hiding treasure, it's bury (put in a hole in the ground).