"Johnny sipped his coffee as he contemplated making a run for it."
She sipped her tea slowly, savoring the warmth and flavor as she watched the sunset.
I drank out of my straw. in the story the three little pigs one pig made his house out of straw.
Wasn't that a dainty dish to set before the king.
The past tense of "sip" is "sipped," and the past participle is also "sipped."
The past tense of sip is sipped.
The simple past and past participle are both sipped.
Emily and her friend simultaneously sipped their root beer, then realized what they had done, laughing.
I sipped the hot tea. Mary sipped her soda, while John gulped his down. Or: He tried to make his glance across the room look casual. She knew better. He caught her eye just as she sipped her martini.
"Delicious," commented Charles as he sipped his liquor. "The Holiday season was good for the party store's business, because sales of liquor tended to go up during that time".
I drank out of my straw. in the story the three little pigs one pig made his house out of straw.
what is a good sentence for the word opposite
A good sentence for the word baffled is:
Any sentence that properly uses the word additionally is a good sentence. Additionally, the above is a great sentence.
Your question is a good sentence using the word "common".
"I am using a sentence with the word economics."
There is not just one good sentence for "there," there are many.
you can use the word good sport in a sentence when you are saying that game was good today you were a very good sport. That is a very good sentence to use for good sport.
Economy. There. I said it. In a one-word sentence.