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Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.
There is no difference.I spoke to Jamie.I spoke with Jamie.They mean the same thing.
Both!
The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.
No, the word spoke is not an adverb.The word spoke is a verb and a noun.
I just spoke to a Sprint rep. on 8-16-10..........she said it does require a data plan. Too bad. I was looking at buying one for my mom off eBay, who dropped hers in some water. She doesn't qualify for the subsidized price on a new handset and I wanted to buy her something a little more stylish than the flip phone she had been using, but she can't afford to pay for the data plan on the Reclaim.......stupid really. They should at least give people the option...
I spoke to... The prepositon TO must be used after the verbs TO SPEAK and TO TALK.
he spoke Tamil.
A spoke
spoke
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Can be either:transitive: She spoke many carefully considered words.intransitive: He spoke indecisively.