Yes, you can say this. You are talking to someone who is crying, and you are saying you know why-- in this case, because a girl (or woman) hurt that person's feelings: "She made you cry."
you say: hey _________( their name) they say: yeah you say: SMELLS *you laugh* *they cry* you say: ha! i made you cry *you laugh even harder*
You could say, " Your my friend so why would you make me cry? It hurts for a friend to make you cry... How would you like it if I made you cry right now? That really hurt my feelings." And then you might want to just mabye try to avoid them for the rest of the day then easing back on to the friendship.
to act as soon as they say action for example if i say i can cry on que, when you say cry i can start to cry
first you say your sad, than say why, then cry.
to cry is 'pleurer' in French.
You can say you are sorry and work it out and make it all better, or you can say yesterday you made me cry because we weren't friends. That's what you can say!
'She made a cry' is technically correct, though it sounds a bit archaic to an American ear, like something out of 19th century literature. We would normally say 'she cried out' or 'she yelled' instead.
She Can't Say I Didn't Cry was created on 1994-05-31.
Yes, he say 'Cry' back in 1951.
"Cry" in Hindi is said as रोना (rona).
The one that made me cry was "Nothing endures but change" I can really relate to it. I think that's why it makes me cry.
James Durbin is the one who made her cry.