The knight got pierced in the heart with a sword by his enemy.
I use the sharp blade of my sword to pierce the heart of my enemy. My best friend is going to let me pierce her ears.
my baby cousin needs to get her ears peirce
He managed the Starbucks store for a month.
Here are three sentences with the word 'pierce': "Jenny is going to pierce her own ears even though we told her not to." "Before cooking, you must pierce the plastic wrapping." "Be careful not to pierce the balloon with the pin or else it will pop."
yes you can use a 15 gauge to pierce your nose i did. and it hurt a lil bit but yes you can
You should be able to find a Franklin Pierce dollar coin .
A Needle.
No
This sentence is grammatically correct. However, it would be more correct to say, "I want you to pierce my baby's ear (or ears)."
yes.
In the sentence "Mayor Pierce considered Ms. Garza and her voting record spotless," the underlined objective complement "spotless" functions as a noun that describes the state or quality of Ms. Garza and her voting record. It provides additional information about how Mayor Pierce views them, effectively completing the thought initiated by the verb "considered."
they use drop c on most of there songs