No , u should know that
No, laughing is an expression of amusement or joy, typically non-verbal, while talking involves conveying information or communication through spoken words. Both are forms of communication, but they serve different purposes.
Laughing is a form of expression that typically conveys amusement or enjoyment through vocalizations. While laughing involves making sounds, it is not considered a form of verbal communication like talking, as it does not convey specific information or messages in the same way that speech does.
Yes, you can use past tense and past perfect tense in the same sentence. The sentence you provided is correct: "They have just been talking and laughing but immediately stopped when the director came in." This structure shows the sequence of events clearly.
There are 2 syllables in the word "laughing."
The sentence "The laughing boy sat down" contains a gerund phrase "laughing boy," where "laughing" functions as a gerund that acts as a noun.
The gerund in the sentence "Laughing is good for a person" is "laughing." Gerunds are verbs ending in -ing that function as nouns in a sentence. In this case, "laughing" serves as the subject of the sentence.
He's either laughing with you or laughing at you. Get it? Got it? Good.
try talking with them and laughing more often.
-Fishing -Car Race -Talking -Laughing -etc.
not really because if you smile at someone you are not laughing
voluntary
voluntary
Of Course! Smiling and Laughing send the same signals to the brain and therefore are processed the same. Smiling is just laughing with out emitting sound.
if he is flirting with you and always talking to you and laughing and wanting to be around you
If guys say that while laughing they are talking about their private area.
I don't know. I have the same problem. My friend recommended that I stop laughing. lol. Are your headaches constant and do you have sharp pains in your head after laughing?
it means the same as lol (laughing out loud)
no they are very differently related