"A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over" is a quote from Benjamin Franklin. It means that words are more hurtful that physical pain.
It is better to hurt one's self by falling than to hurt someone else by saying something one shouldn't
it was the story of three dinosaurs named foot, foot foot, and foot foot foot, and one of them got stuck in the tar pit I wish I could find a vidoe of it it was hillarious,, and funny too
The plural of foot is feet.
The phrase "stepping foot" or, to "step foot" is a grammatically correct way of illustrating ones appearance or new coming to a a new or unfamiliar environment. One could use this phase in such a sentence as, "I am soon to be "stepping foot" on the moon. This phrase is commonly used by intelligent scholars of the English language, but may not be so familiar to foreigners or uneducated persons. EDIT {Adam C., native English speaker}: Um, no, "Step foot" is actually a grammatically and idiomatically INcorrect variation on the standard phrase, which is "SET foot". You will hear many American English speakers using "step foot" and its popularity will likely increase with time, but at present it is still widely regarded as wrong. Formally, "step" is an intransitive verb that takes no direct object, and thus "to step foot" is ungrammatical: You may step ON, OFF, or INTO places WITH your feet, but you don't step places or feet! "Set" is the transitive verb you need: when you step somewhere, you set your foot in/on a place. Thus: "Armstrong was the first human to set foot on the moon," and "I'm never setting foot in her house again as long as I live!"
The singular possessive form is foot's.
The noun 'feet' is plural; the singular form is 'foot'.Examples:He tested the water with one foot then put both feet in.The rail is priced by the foot, you will need six feet.
Foot drop is caused because there is disruption in signalling of the nerve to the muscle. The muscle that brings the foot up fails and so the foot drops The nerve can be temporarily injured = neuropraxia and therefore will recover. More extensive injuries to the nerve may or may not recover. A complete transection of the nerve is unlikely to recover without surgery So it depends on the cause and how extensive the injury to the nerve is
her foot
yes on her foot its a heart
It depends on what kind of foot injury that you have. I have heard that when there is a sprain, it is better to walk on it and exercise for it to heal, but if the injury is a break, you need to stay off of your foot.
30 feet is 10 yards.
1 foot = 12 inches 5 foot = 12 x 5 = 60 inches
never
a Foot
The word "loom" is pronounced as "loom" with a long 'oo' sound like in 'moo' and a silent 'm' at the end.
Yes as Africa is known for poor people to go bare foot. they don't have any footwear at all
Approach her ... left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot, trip, get up pretend it never happened, left foot, right foot...
I currently have one in my shoe, but have never had one in my foot.