I do not want to lose my loose change.
The loose noose will lose the calf.
One way to use "loose" and "lose" in the same sentence is: "Be careful not to lose the keychain that has a loose connection."
No, a cumulative sentence and a loose sentence are not the same. A cumulative sentence is a sentence that starts with an independent clause and is followed by a series of subordinate clauses or phrases that provide additional information. A loose sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence in which the main idea is stated first, followed by phrases or clauses that provide further details or examples.
No, sentence fragments and phrases are not the same. A phrase is a group of related words that does not contain a subject and a verb, while a sentence fragment is a group of words that appears to be a sentence but is missing a subject, a verb, or both. In other words, a phrase is a fragment whereas a sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence.
When most of the words in a sentence start with the same letter, it is called alliteration.
Two consecutive words in the one sentence that mean the same thing are called "redundant expressions."
When two or more words start with the same sound in a sentence, it is called alliteration. Alliteration is a literary device used to create a pleasing or memorable effect.
Misplace, fail, reduce. Loose (USA only).
Some examples using "lose":To "lose" means the opposite of "to win."- You are going to lose your game tonight.- Did someone lose their hat?- He did not not know that he could lose it.Some examples using "loose":"Loose" means "not tight."- These jeans are big on me; they are too loose.- That knot is too loose.- The screw is loose; it needs to be tighter.Some examples using both in the same sentence:-If you do not tie your loose shoelace, you may lose your shoe.-The management is trying to lose that loose cannon.-Don't lose my loose canary!
No, a cumulative sentence and a loose sentence are not the same. A cumulative sentence is a sentence that starts with an independent clause and is followed by a series of subordinate clauses or phrases that provide additional information. A loose sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence in which the main idea is stated first, followed by phrases or clauses that provide further details or examples.
No. Loose is an adjective that means "not firmly or tightly fixed in place", while find is a verb that means "to locate or recover". If you meant "Is lose and find the same thing?", then the answer is still no, because lose and find are opposites.
Yes both words have same meaning!
No, sentence fragments and phrases are not the same. A phrase is a group of related words that does not contain a subject and a verb, while a sentence fragment is a group of words that appears to be a sentence but is missing a subject, a verb, or both. In other words, a phrase is a fragment whereas a sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence.
The words do not change their meaning in a sentence.
Alliteration .
Some words that come to mind is release, let loose, and unfetter.
Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana. Parallel structure is when the sentence is basically the same with different words. The structure of the sentence is the same in both cases. The words of the sentence may be different in both cases.
Yes, you ARE supposed to lose them. I found a map of teeth and the years you are supposed to lose them, online. I had my second premolars loose and was wondering the same thing since they are very large and look like permanent teeth.
was it a car or a cat i saw . .wasitacaroracatisaw. . ~ the only English sentence that has exactly the same words even if you read it reversely ! :)