I could use another towel, please.
I like that towel.
The towel is very plush.
This is my favorite bath towel!
I dried myself with the towel
Jeff, did you get your reward? Get me a towel!
Wipe your hands on the towel.Pass me the towel please.
I will moisten the paper towel before I use it to clean the counter.
The towel absorbed the water on my skin as I walked away from the pool
C. It's the person doing the action.
A paper towel absorbing liquid is an example of capillary action.
John averted his eyes when his sister walked into the bathroom wearing just a towel.
Who's to blame? "Who's" is a conjunction meaning "who is?" So, if you want to construct a sentence using "who's," try to say "who is" and see if the sentence still makes sense. Whose towel was left on the locker room's floor? "Whose" is the possessive of "who"; denoting ownership, e.g., whose towel, whose car, whose newspaper.
As I read the book, I was completely absorbed in the story and couldn't put it down.
Her favorite color is Fuchsia. The fuchsia rug was hideous. The sweatervest was fuchsia. Fuchsia is a great color for a towel.