A King sits on a throne, and a ball is often thrown.
A homophone for what a king sits on is "throne" and for what is done with a ball is "thrown."
"Sits" is present tense.
"He sits by the table" is correct. "He is seated by the table" is also correct. The context in which you are using them may influence which you use and also what particular idea you want to get across.
"In her high chair" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
A metaphor for silence can be a calm ocean without a ripple, where the water sits undisturbed and still.
Sit is the simple present tense.
The king sits on his throne. Prince William is next in line for the English throne.
Lone Ranger
Throne.
A king sits on a throne.
It sits on a king chair
Well if you mean when NOT why Then it is WHEN HE SITS ON THE THRONE Hope it Helped (:
Toilet sits are often more effective if done after meals
the king sits on the top the church officials and noble under king and the knights at the bottom of them and way at the bottom the peasants
King Arthur and his knights... get a history book.
As the king sits on the throne of his kingdom, he shall write a copy of the Torah.
fhhb
thrown is the past participle of throw, while throne is the royal chair the king sits on.