The judge slammed his hammer down and deafened the poor typist sitting beside him.
The family was deafened by a loud crash as the roof caved in during the storm.
The loud music deafened her temporarily, leaving her ears ringing.
Here are some sentences.
The explosion deafened him.
Her attitude deafened him to her pleas.
The verb for deaf is deafen.Other verbs are deafens, deafening and deafened.Some example sentences are:"This will deafen you"."The explosion deafens everyone"."She let out a deafening scream when her mother said she can't have ice cream"."I was deafened by the horn".
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
No, the sentence "I thought so" is not an interrogative sentence. It is a declarative sentence expressing the speaker's belief or opinion. An interrogative sentence is one that asks a question.
No, the sentence "Judge a man by his words not his actions" is not an assertive sentence. It is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction.
A sentence that asks a question is called an interrogative sentence.
Association of Late-Deafened Adults was created in 1987.
Being deaf is not a property of any castle. Leeds Castle han never been deafened
The Englishman Sir Walter Raleigh
well buy a ladder and climb up the wall!
Before we go any further it's spelt hyperbole and pronounced?high-per-bol-ee.?It is over-exaggeration in a sentence eg. I could drink a whole ocean of water or her screechy voice deafened me.
Threatened, Left them, Beckoned, end, friend, apprehend, comprehend, maiden, wakened
Deaf or deafened, when used in terms like this. "I'm 30% deaf in my right ear."
I'm not sure of his name, but it turns out to be the kid that Sean deafened in one ear before he came to Degrassi.
If it has to do with not hearing well, it's "deafened". If it's relating to helping someone with defense, it's "defend" (present tense) or "defended" (past tense).
Depends on how you use it."Roar" is a verb in this example: The lion roared at the audience."Roar" is an onomatopoeia in this example: The roar of the wind deafened me.
acousticophobia
In the first film and book? She got a severe burn on her leg while trying to run away from a wildfire. When trying to drop a Tracker Jacker nest onto the enemy tributes, she got stung three times and fell unconscious for a couple days. When blowing up the food pyramids the Career tributes had gathered, the explosion deafened her. In the book, it permanently deafened her right ear, but in the film, the hearing loss was just temporary