Yes, the sentence is punctuated correctly. The period is placed after "oz" as it signifies an abbreviation for "ounces."
No, using the verb 'flood', the auxiliary verb 'has' calls for the past tense of the main verb: Your house has flooded. Using the word 'flood' as a noun, calls for an article preceding the noun: Your house has a flood. Your house has the flood.
She worked feverishly to meet the deadline, typing away without a break.
Il s'appelle. Literally: He calls himself/It calls itself.In correct English it would be: His name is, or it's name is.Source: MA in French.
Ducked is a verb (past tense for duck) which means to move quickly to avoid something. Example sentence: When the ball bounced off the rim toward the crowd, the whole left end of the bleachers ducked for cover.
The word is correctly spelled "strikes" (plural noun, more than one strike, or the verb form as in "hits", or calls a union work stoppage).
The recipe calls for mayonnaise, but alternatively you could use molasses.
The recipe calls for you to kneed the dough for 30 minutes.
pooh
the recipe calls for; three fourth cup of brown sugar :)
I found a recipe on the internet. My family likes the recipe a lot. The recipe calls for sirloin steak.
no
No you cant
Yes.
If the recipe calls for it, yes.
My recipe calls for fresh, chopped ginger, Can I use ground ginger & in what proportion. The recipe calls for 2 tsp. fresh chopped ginger?
Sometimes you can, but it is best to always stick to what the recipe calls for.
If the recipe calls for sweetener of any kind, decrease the amount of it u use