No.
Or, from a different point of view, yes. The most excruciatingly correct may insist that leaning is properly done against a wall, not on it, but in everyday speech, leaning on the wall is what you'll hear from just about everyone.
Yes, it is correct to say "leaning on the wall" if someone is resting or putting their weight against a vertical surface for support.
The wall was looked by him and herNo, this is wrong answer, correct sentence would be "The wall is being looked by him and her". because the sentence is in present cont. tense.from: Abid PakistaniThe correct Passive Voice is;The wall is being looked at by him and her.
You say "a wall" in French as "un mur."
In conjunction with
No. If you are trying to say that you have the same opinion as another person, the correct way to say it is "I agree with you."
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
if walls could talk they would say "why are you trying to talk to me i am a wall. Stop leaning on me
be spiderman
The reaction is the wall pushing back on you.
some say the leaning was to praise the main builder in the building of the leaning tower
Your pitching trying to get closest to the wall your pitching at. When your throw lands the quarter leaning against that wall, its a leaner.
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A ladder leaning against a wall. The slated part of the roof of a house.
he is sitting on a wall or something and he is leaning on his hand like he is thinking :) thanks for looking at this
Nothing much except leaning on a wall and having it fall on you and you die a bad and bloody death
The term "wailing wall" is a misnomer, resulting from the first British soldiers observing Jews praying at the wall (they thought the Jews were wailing).The correct term is Western Wall, and it is called ha Kotel ha Ma'aravi (הַכֹּתֶל הַמַּעֲרָבִי)
The Great Wall of Polynesia The Leaning Castle of Papeete Opera House