She is quite gifted intellectually. He was gifted the land by an uncle.
She bestowed a great gift upon the child...
You will be considered an ingrate if you don't send a thank you note to the person who gave you the gift.
My parents put red tape all around my Christmas gift.
"I" is the correct word to use sometimes and "me" is the correct word to use sometimes.Use "I" when you are referring to yourself and you are the subject of the sentence. For example, "I went to the store."Use "me" when you are referring to yourself and you are the object of the sentence or in a prepositional phrase and the like. For example, "Grandfather gave me a gift."
The word "present" as a noun can have two different meanings: 1) a gift, and 2) the time period happening now, the existing moment.So depending on which definition of present you want to use, you could use a sentence where you would use the word 'gift' and replace gift with the word "present," or you could use a sentence where you are talking about the current time period happening now and you'd usually use it with the word "the" - "the present.""My mother gave me a nice present for my birthday.""Dinosaurs lived in the past, and humans live in the present."The word 'present' is also a verb (They will present an award...) and and adjective (At the present time...).
The adjective in that sentence is "beautiful". An adjective is used to desciribe a noun. The noun in the sentence is "gift".
A book is a good gift for my literary grandmother.Literary study is fun. His main interests are literary.
I am writing a letter to my sweetheart.She was my childhood sweetheart.Thank you sweetheart for the gift.
They had to have a token to ride the ride. A small, inexpensive gift is a token gift.
A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. Example sentence: This outfit was a gift from my cousin, Summer.
Is it customary to bring a gift when you are invited to a barbecue?
He was pleasantly surprised when he opened the gift and saw what it was.