'My feet were injured in the accident.'
This sentence is correct.
20 feet wide. If the sentence is started with the number then spell it out.
No. Sentences shouldn't end in prepositions. "Across" is a preposition.
Yes you can. If the sentence is the answer to a question, such as 'Who has the money?' or 'What has feet that size?', for example. The answer would be, 'He has.' or 'A bear has.' They're not good sentences but they are correct because the object of the sentence is implied without repeating it from the question.
The plural of foot is feet. The possessive form of feet would have to be feet's. However, I cannot think of any sentence where I would use that word in that form. (My feet's toes are getting cold.) I just don't like that word. I would rearrange the sentence. (The toes on my feet are getting cold.) Both are correct.
the feet might be injured
i did I'm 3 feet tall we jumped him he ain't injured he got shot be me john cena
If you can perform a standing broad jump of over 10 feet, that would be an astounding feat. He injured both feet while attempting the dangerous feat.
14.8 feet. * * * * * No! The correct answer is 5.84 feet.
In the sentence "Your feet are tired", the simple subject is "feet": Note that "feet" is the only noun in the sentence, and the only pronoun, "your", is in its possessive case, not suitable for a sentence subject.
Then people get injured feet
so their feet would not get injured in battle
Place emergency signal devices at least how many feet before scene of accident?