The word is spelled stuck, just as you spelled it.
S-T-U-C-K.
The correct spelling is chimney.An example sentence is: "Santa ate so many pies that he got stuck in the chimney".
The past tense of "stuck" is "stuck." For example: "I was stuck in traffic yesterday."
stuck kelvin escober
The past tense of "stuck" is "stuck." The word remains the same in both present and past tenses.
The past participle of "stick" is "stuck."
it is spelled suck
That is the correct spelling of "homebound" (headed home, or stuck at home).
Atascado - stuck in something. Can't move. My car is stuck. I am stuck in the mud. Atrapado - stuck in one place (Literally "trapped"), I'm stuck in the house and can't leave. Pegado - Stuck to something. The paper is stuck (taped) to the wall. Pillado - Mentally stuck and unable to think quickly (being caught in a lie).
The dictionary is such a clever device because not only does it tell you how to spell a word, but also what that specific word means. If your ever stuck on how to spell a word you can almost always be sure to find it in the dictionary.
you use a spell that you learn in the Herbology level (im stuck on the Voldemort level)
Some possibilities for this spelling : POLLUTED - made impure or contaminated PROTRUDED - stuck out PARACHUTED - descended with a fabric safety device
The correct spelling is chimney.An example sentence is "Santa was stuck in the chimney for two hours until the firefighters rescued him".
The correct spelling is chimney.An example sentence is: "Santa ate so many pies that he got stuck in the chimney".
The likely word is "tongue" (oral muscle that aids in tasting and chewing).
shiny - the glasses came up nice and shiny in the dishwasher.shinny - Ben had to shinny up the tree to rescue his kite which was stuck in the branches.
The past tense of "stuck" is "stuck." For example: "I was stuck in traffic yesterday."
Could be as simple as a stuck closed thermostat or as major as a bad head gasket or worse, a cracked head.