It depends what you mean......... eg. 'the apple I found is rotten' or 'she is a rotten speller'
It was a rotten way to end what had been a rotten day. The fruit was rotten. The word rotten can be used as an adjective or an adverb.
how to use inexplicable in three sentence's
This is a sentence. A prisoner has to serve the sentence the judge gives him.
If you said "use coincidence in a sentence" you already know how to use it in a sentence and are probably getting examples. if you said" how do you use coincidence in a sentence" you most-likely don't know the definition of it.
This sentence is about nothing.
The melon was so rotten that it became concave when it was pressed on.
There was a grape under the table. The grape was rotten.
The fetid bog smelt of rancid milk and rotten eggs.
My father never picks the rotten and malformed fruits at the grocery store! :)
It was a rotten way to end what had been a rotten day. The fruit was rotten. The word rotten can be used as an adjective or an adverb.
The old, rotten food gave the hunger soldiers a bad case of dystrophy.
sentence :Rotten fruits are not consumable.
The apple is rotten and is no longer good to eat.
After losing electricity for three days, mom found me discarding the rotten food from the freezer.
Well, it really depends. You can say, she got the apple, but it was rotten. I think that you should, unless the sentence is really short, in which then you shouldn't.
That apple is rotten!
Do not place rotten tomatoes in vent.