I walked up to the tiger, and it roared at me.
the lion roared at the zebra.
Sure thing, honey. Here's a sassy sentence for you: "Randy the lion let out a raucous roar, rattling the rainforest with his rowdy roarings." Boom, there you go, alliteration at its finest.
well the word roar is onomatopoeia so i guess it is...
Beware that woman's roar. "The Mouse That Roared" is a favorite book of mine. The Captain's shouted orders could not be heard above the ocean's roar.
Depends on how you use it."Roar" is a verb in this example: The lion roared at the audience."Roar" is an onomatopoeia in this example: The roar of the wind deafened me.
The big Boom made the whole crowd roar.
But this mental tintinnabulation was exacerbated by the roar of unwelcome laudatory correspondence.
The simple predicate in the sentence "A lion's roar can frighten others" is "can frighten." This phrase indicates the action or state of being that the subject, "A lion's roar," is performing. The simple predicate focuses on the verb and any helping verbs, excluding the subject and other modifiers.
I appeared fierce to my opponents after tearing apart a noodle with one hand.
they use their claws and roar
You use a cheat code
Simple - sentence has a subject and a verb (Lions roar.) Compound - two simple sentences are joined together with a conjunction (Lions roar and cows moo). Complex - A complex sentence contains a clause, which is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb but does NOT express a complete thought. (I like vanilla ice cream but my family prefers chocolate)