According to the Princeton online dictionary:
You didn't say which meaning of the word you want to use. If you mean bulk as in size or mass, you could say "The large bulk of the mountain shaded the city."
If you mean bulk as in the major portion, you could say "The bulk of the work is finished."
If you mean bulk as in a large quantity, you could say "Buying in bulk saves money."
If you mean bulk as in to gain muscle mass, you could say "He will bulk up after he works out for a few weeks."
It should be balk at the idea. "Balk" means to refuse to move or cooperate. If you balk at the idea, you are refusing to cooperate with whatever is going on or about to go on.
the word rag in a sentence
A sentence with the word 'porcupine' in it is no different from any other sentence, it is just a sentence referring to a porcupine.
Can you give me a sentence with the word betwitched?
You need a sentence with the word towards.
a sentence using the word endotracheal
the bulk of the money was in the paycheck
The bulk of the money was in his paycheck.
She unwittingly told the thief where her family kept the bulk of their securities.
The bulk of my diet was pizza.
As a noun, the Latin for "bulk" is amplitudo or moles.
"Bulk" and "wart" are two words, not one.
I'm tired of doing the bulk of the work while my teammates do nothing.After doing the bulk of my homework for the week, my teacher assigned more homework.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE
smallness, minority
bulk up...
"filled the door with her frowzy bulk" They have "frowzy white hair"
a sentence with the word variety