A chicken wing who needs some ketchup with his fries
Yes. It means that the kitchen must be kept clean.If the kitchen is dirty, the phrase would be the kitchen needs to be cleaned, i.e. it needs cleaning.
The phrase 'blah blah blah all of your needs' is a term used when someone is complaining about how their life is bad or how their life isn't going right, so the phrase 'blah blah blah all of your needs' is used because all they are doing is talking and complaining about themselves and their lives.
She needs the answer to her question, which is what is a catchy phrase for her project, not what brand will absorb the most liquid. By the way, I need the answer to that too :D
The phrase "immediate attention" means that something needs to be looked into right away. A sentence using the phrase would be "Mary went into labor and required immediate attention from a doctor."
needs doing up needs repairing
That is the correct spelling of the phrase "everyone needs check-ups" (or checkups).
A chicken wing who needs some ketchup with his fries
The game of riches needs a focused and intelligent mind
No one needs excellence!
No needs is a verb and it is only one word. A phrase is 2,3 or more words.Needs is the third person singular form of need. You use needs when the subject of the sentence is he,she,it or a singular noun. eg:He needs a new shirt. -- He is the subjectIt needs a coat of paint. -- It is the subject.The doctor needs a new car. -- Doctor is the subject.Compare this to:We need some rain soon. -- We is a plural subject
A nonessential phrase is a phrase in a sentence that doesn't need to be there. For example; The boy, who just ate dinner, wrote that story. No one needs to know that the boy just ate dinner. Who just ate dinner is a nonessential phrase.
i dont know but some 1 needs to answer this
g has 60 pairs of socks
The phrase, "because I'm worth it", became famous in the mid 2000s because L'Oreal used this to advertise their cosmetic products. Later on, the phrase will alter to meet new needs.
Here are some sentences.This article needs translation.What is the translation of that phrase?
In a simple phrase...NOT VERY.