If you can use past tense, then "We buried Grandfather last week" our
i bury my dog bones =(
They will bury the body tomorrow. Dogs like to bury their food for later.
Might not be the answer you are looking for but it could be something like this, "We have to bury this can with a shovel" "They will bury him under 6 feet of earth by Monday"
The first is the topic sentence, unless you bury the lead.
When you are finished cutting firewood, it is safest to bury the hatchet in the end grain of a spare log. It seems like those two will never bury the hatchet.
You should stand up and take notice, don't bury your head in the sand like an ostrich.
To inter means to bury. They will inter the body at noon today.
There are alot and the founder is a plane droped from porterico to Mexico were did they bury the survisers
I live in the borough of Bury, within short driving distance of the borough of Blackburn.
its bury me bury me
Bury me down by the river.Bury me not on the lone prairie.Bury my heart at Wounded Knee.A doctor can bury his mistakes but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines. (Frank Lloyd Wright, architect)
The homonym of "bury" is "berry." While "bury" means to place a dead body in the ground, "berry" refers to a small, pulpy, and typically edible fruit.