If you fall asleep in your jacket, you will rumple it.
To rumple is to muss or ruffle or tousle, more commonly seen as the past participle adjective "rumpled." Even more rarely, rumple is used as a noun."After he made his bed each morning, his pet cat would playfully rumple all of the covers.The girl's curly hair was arranged in a casual rumple that looked windblown and wild.
The past tense of rumple is rumpled.
John N. W. Rumple died in 1903.
John N. W. Rumple was born in 1841.
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I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.
Rumple Minze is produced in Germany. It is a peppermint schnapps known for its high alcohol content and cooling mint flavor.
Jarry use paroxysm in a sentence.\
I would use the word "theory" in a sentence like this: "The scientist presented a new theory to explain the findings of the experiment."
Would not that be "Would not that be?"?
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.