Many rabbits jump into bushes because they live there. Dogs will follow them because they are designed to hunt rabbits.
These are two separate thoughts: The rabbit jumped into the bushes. The dog followed it.To make it into one complex sentence you could write it as:The rabbit jumped into the bushes and the dog followed it.When the rabbit jumped into the bushes, the dog followed it.
When the rabbit jumped into the bushes, the dog followed it.The rabbit jumped into the bushes so the dog followed it.
When the rabbit jumped into the bushes, the dog followed it. The rabbit jumped into the bushes so the dog followed it.
"The dog followed it as the rabbit jumped into the bushes."
Chased is the past tense and past participle of the verb chase:The dog chased the rabbit into the bushes.
The dog jumped up onto the bed.
To his astonishment, the dog had jumped over the fence.
There is a rabbit in the garden.The dog is about to see the rabbit that is in the garden.Watch how the dog chases the rabbit out of the garden.I hope the rabbit escapes.
bushes
The sentence "The dog jumped into the stream" contains a transitive verb ("jumped") because it has a direct object ("stream").
When you say something like "A dog jumped" you are talking about one among several. In other words, "A dog" means that there are several dogs but only one jumped ."The dog jumped" means that there was only one around. It's the only dog to be seen.
Because the dog gets jealous from the rabbit