"I saw a badger when i came home from school".
or say anything with badger in the sentence.
The badger was in the garden.
The badger dug deep burrows in the forest to create its den.
All of a sudden a wild badger attacked me.
Go badger someone else.
The German word for badger is Dachs.
The badger's persistent burrowing is often to the coyote's advantage. The burrowing owl lives here.
There are two syllables in the word badger. The syllables of the word are bad-ger.
Badgers live in holes in the ground.
The badger tried to eat my cat. If that's not good enough, just stop badgering me.
There is no possessive noun in the sentence.The proper noun Angela Badger is functioning as an attributive noun to describe the noun books. An attributive noun (also called a noun adjunct) is a noun that functions as an adjective to describe another noun.The sentence with a possessive noun is:Angela Badger's books were about girls with lots of problems.An apostrophe s ('s) or just an apostrophe (') added to the end of a word forms a possessive case noun.
I don't know why the badger would share his burrow with the coyote. I saw a versatile boxer badger his way to the championship last night. You really don't want to mess with a badger.
A badger is "un blaireau" (masc. - plural: des blaireaux) in French.