The verb "blew" in the sentence "the watchman blew this whistle" is transitive because it requires an object ("this whistle") to complete its meaning.
The future tense of "whistle" is "will whistle." For example, "He will whistle a tune tomorrow."
The possessive form is whistle's.
The past tense of 'whistle' is whistled.
The correct spelling is "whistle."
Sure! In the sentence "She can whistle," "whistle" is the main verb and "can" is the helping (modal) verb.
I guess it just makes it louder than regular whistling, and gets peoples attention.
whistle whistle
The future tense of "whistle" is "will whistle." For example, "He will whistle a tune tomorrow."
You have to whisper in the library so you won't disturb people who are reading.
its whistle
A whistle is "un sifflet" in French, to whistle (verb) is "siffler"
The whistle of the mortar overhead was the last thing he heard.There was a whistle from the kitchen, telling him the kettle was boiled.He always liked to whistle on his way to work, which I found annoying. So one day I brought a shovel along to work. He won't whistle any more.
I whistle when I'm scared.Sometimes, I whistle but only make a blowing sound.I whistle to keep a good mood.
Yes. The whistle at the end of the Hunger Games trailer, is in deen, Rue's whistle.
Yes, "whistle" is a concrete noun because it refers to a physical object. It is something you can see and hold in your hand, making it tangible.
No she can't whistle.
Whistle In was created in 1967.