She washed the shells and dried them in the sun is an example of a sentence that has a compound predicate. Two or more verbs that are separated by a conjunction are compound predicates.
Yes. If you split the sentence, the noun or pronoun should carry 2 sentences. She washed the shells. She dried them in the sun. Compound Sentence: She washed the shells and dried them in the sun.
Passive Voice: The windows have been washed. Active Voice: John washed the windows. Sally washed the windows. Sally and John washed the windows. They washed the windows. He washed the windows. She washed the windows. Or... John had washed the windows. etc.
washed the windows had been
The collective nouns for shells are:a broadside of shells (artillery)a salvo of shells (artillery)a midden of shells (sea)
Washed
Yes. If you split the sentence, the noun or pronoun should carry 2 sentences. She washed the shells. She dried them in the sun. Compound Sentence: She washed the shells and dried them in the sun.
paintballs should not be washed or dried.
achoihol
Mary Magdalen washed his feet with expensive oil and dried it with her hair.
Duck tape
Adobe is the Spanish name for a sun-dried brick.
Adobe is the Spanish name for a sun-dried brick.
A tomato (sun dried or not) is a fruit. For culinary purposes it is a vegetable
YES!!! That's why they put it in the title but, if the word sun maid was NOT in the title it would not be dried in the SUN.
That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.That was when the cavemen sat in the Sun, to get warm, or when they dried their firewood, or their meat, in the sun.
Yes, but only in louk warm water and it mush be hand washed, and you have to let them sit out to dry.
Dried Chinese foxglove root, called sheng di Huang or dry Rehmannia, the fresh root is picked, washed well, then dried in the sun during the winter. Large, fleshy brownish-yellow chunks taste sweet and moist.