irony
metaphor
irony
hyperbole
Irony
There are two ways to correct this sentence, which is an ungrammatical mixture of direct and indirect speech.First, you can turn it into direct speech by using the appropriate punctuation (quotation marks and a question mark):Jerry asked "How was the lunch you had with mother?"Second, you can turn it into indirect speech by rewriting it, for example:Jerry asked her how the lunch with their mother had been.Note that when you turn a question from direct to indirect speech there are two essential elements. One is that the order of the verb and subject is reversed: 'how was the lunch' becomes 'how the lunch had been'. The other is that the tense of the verb goes a step further back into the past: 'was' becomes 'had been'.
The easiest way to figure out these kind of grammar questions is to drop the other person (in this case, Mom) from the sentence and listen to how it sounds. For example, would you say: Please join I for lunch? Or would you say: Please join me for lunch? I think you would agree the second way is correct so you would say, Please join Mom and me for lunch.
Like most words, "eating" can be used as different parts of speech. It is a noun when used like this: Eating is fun. It is a verb when used like this: She is eating a hot dog for lunch.
We did not take our lunch. We have not had our lunch. We have not taken lunch.
What did you have for lunch. It makes much more sense than what did you had for lunch.
ur fat
She asked if lunch was ready.
If a person skipped a meal and the blood sugar levels dropped, the liver could release some of the stored sugar back into the blood.
The poor child is acting out because she is starving for attention. The goal of several charities is to feed starving people around the world. My teenager is usually starving by lunch time and he eats at least three sandwiches. I know you want to lose weight, but starving yourself is not the way to do it.
He asked if lunch was ready.
A word is a part of speech, not a sentence like the one in your example.
In "The Giver," Jonas gets chastised for using the word "starving" when describing his hunger after skipping lunch. He is corrected by the Chief Elder, who tells him that "starving" is an outdated term and that the community is simply "hungry." This scene highlights the strict control over language and emotions in their society.
There are two ways to correct this sentence, which is an ungrammatical mixture of direct and indirect speech.First, you can turn it into direct speech by using the appropriate punctuation (quotation marks and a question mark):Jerry asked "How was the lunch you had with mother?"Second, you can turn it into indirect speech by rewriting it, for example:Jerry asked her how the lunch with their mother had been.Note that when you turn a question from direct to indirect speech there are two essential elements. One is that the order of the verb and subject is reversed: 'how was the lunch' becomes 'how the lunch had been'. The other is that the tense of the verb goes a step further back into the past: 'was' becomes 'had been'.
If your dumb enough to live in Iowa, you can figure it out yourself.
Or is a coordinating conjunction.
A comparison between two things that does not use "like" or "as" is a metaphor. But another phrase used to compare two things is "similar to".A metaphor is a figure of speech that makes a comparison without using "like" or "as." An example of a metaphor would be, "The boy was a bullet, running across the field."
well if you are at school and you either didn't eat breakfast their or at school and if u didn't eat lunch well you wouldn't have energy in your body and u would be starving yourself and would probably need to eat a big dinner or else you will get a massive headanche cause it had happened to me before