it kills kids because he was bullyed when he was a kid
You kill It the clown by getting a knife and stabbin him in his heart
No, the term 'Tommy the clown' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a noun in a sentence. The noun phrase 'Tommy the clown' is base on the noun 'Tommy' restated by the noun 'clown'.The noun phrase 'Tommy the clown' is singular, one person, Tommy.Example:Tommy the clown is appearing tonight. (subject of the sentence)We have tickets to see Tommy the clown. (direct object of the verb 'see')She's appearing with Tommy the clown. (object of the preposition 'with')
yes, anybody can kill anybody.
Bozo Radley
It means to have sex with the person in his or her room.
Yes, when he is ready to kill
The participle phrase is "laughing at the silly clown", laughing is the present participle of the verb to laugh.Nouns: children, clown, rowVerbs: laughing, satAdjectives: silly, firstThere are no pronouns or adverbs.A participle is an adjective made form a verb.The participle in "The children laughing at the silly clown sat in the front row" is laughing.
No
clown fish
Yes. It should read "Mike played the part of a clown in the play". Otherwise it appears like the phrase "of a clown" modifies "play" not "part".
He got bored.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the phrase "hot gas" is used by Scout to describe when someone is talking nonsense or making things up. It implies that the person is exaggerating or being dishonest in their words.