"I watched the spirit manifest itself before me,OR,her anxiety manifest itself in her incessant hair twirling.
'I watched the spirit manifest itself before me, OR, her anxiety manifested itself in her incessant hair-twirling.
It can be a noun, as in the sentence 'the ship's manifest shows the quantity of coal on board'. Or it can be a adjective as in ' it is manifest that he is an idiot.' Or a verb: to manifest = to show = to display.
Manifest Destiny is the belief that it is our god given right to own land from coast to coast or ocean to ocean
Go. This is a sentence made using a single word. This the shortest sentence in English.
Fart is not a nice word. There you go, there's a sentence using the word.
No. This is a sentence with only one word: "Go."
Yes, the word 'no' can be a complete sentence when it is a response to a sentence that came just before it. As a response, the previous sentence is implied as part of the sentence "No." Example: May I go with you? No. (No, you may not go with me.)
When you go to sleep, you dream.
It is expedient that you go.
Go kill her.
To use "manifest" in a sentence, you can say, "Her enthusiasm for the project began to manifest through her creative ideas and dedication." Alternatively, you could write, "The symptoms of the illness will manifest within a few days." In both examples, "manifest" is used to indicate the display or emergence of something.
Ok, well first of you have to think of a sentence for the word.....of just go to the internet and search for the word