Sleeping past your normal or regular time.
Someone was sleeping.
The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.The roman gladiators slept in the barracks which were part of their school.
sleep/slept/slept
Slept is the past tense and past participle of sleep.
Slept is the past tense of the verb sleep, so there is no past tense for it.
If you slept through something, you did not wake up in time to attend it; you slept until after the event was over.
I once slept in the Lincoln bedroom at the White House. I slept through the movie. We slept through the earthquake. I slept over at a friends house. ect.
"Slept like a rock" means that someone slept very soundly, indeed.
Slept with - most likely to have sex with , and spended the night with her/him. Slept with is a more polite term than using the word sex. Here are some examples .... (Example 1) I slept with Amber and it was amazing! (Example 2) No-one has slept with me so I am one hundred percent pure virgin! :) (Example 3) What? He slept with someone else? , Its so over for him ! ......... Hope I helped :)
The idiom "slept like a log" means sleeping very deeply and soundly, to the extent that one is completely unaware of their surroundings and doesn't wake up easily. The phrase is often used to describe a very restful and uninterrupted sleep.
dormi mean 'slept' in French.
children over the age of 5 slept outside, mums and dads slept inside {tent or house} and babies slept in draws...also miners slept in a tent or on the ground in the open... :) :) :)
Someone was sleeping.
well yes you slept together!
The past tense of sleepover is slept over.Ex:On the weekend I slept over at my friend's house.
It over swept! (Get it? It over slept!)
No.