This is the past tense of row which means to paddle a boat.
It can mean a line of something, like a row of plants, a row of houses, or it can mean to move a boat through the water using to oars- row your boat.
It means manually propelled a boat, or similar object, across a length of water using an implement with a flat blade.
Mean
The haudensaunee mean irguios
MEAN ignoble - being mean signify - mean
R mean reastate the question. A mean answer it. F mean for example. F mean for example. T mean this show that. RAFFT that what it mean in Ela
The two girls were very mean to me. This is a sentence containing the word mean.
rowed Rowed. Rowed.
(Rowed is the past tense of to row, as a boat)"He rowed the boat across the lake.""The Vikings rowed their longboats through the narrow fjords."
i rowed my boat to the dock.
road: "We travelled on the road". rowed: "We rowed the boat."
The homophones for "rowed" are "road" and "rode".
No. An adverb is a word that describes a verb. Rowed itself is a verb form, very rarely used as an adjective (e.g. rowed boats).
a light vehicle rowed by a paddle is calle
road: "We travelled on the road". rowed: "We rowed the boat."
Using wooden oars, he rowed the boat across the lake.
There are two homonyms for rowed. He rode his bike on an isolated, dirt road.
The past participle of "row" is "rowed."
road, rode and a couple proper names Rhode and Rhoad.