the dog gnawed away at the bone
Gnaw is a verb, but gnawed is a verb past tense. There are a few ways you can say it in a sentence below. The dog gnawed at her bone. He gnawed at the meat, forgetting his manners.
Example sentence - The little piglets squealed when we tried to hold them.
Example sentence - He loved his little calico kitten.
The squirrel ran along the telephone wire.
Horses and oxen have been domesticated to work on farms.
When my dog was a puppy, he had gnawed on my dad.
The rat gnawed at the rope for some time before it had split a part.
Gnaw is a verb, but gnawed is a verb past tense. There are a few ways you can say it in a sentence below. The dog gnawed at her bone. He gnawed at the meat, forgetting his manners.
The spaniel gnawed happily on a bone.
There are five phonemes in the word "gnawed": /g/ /n/ /ɔː/ /d/.
The word gnawed is a verb form, or adjective, and would not have a plural.
The 'g' and the 'd' are silent in the word "gnawed". The 'g' is silent at the beginning of the word, and the 'd' is silent at the end.
A non-example of something gnawed would be a pristine pencil. Pencils are often chewed on incessantly as a nervous habit.
Example sentence with the word "advise":"I would advise you not to do that."
This is an example of a sentence using the word breakfast.
The antonym of gnawed is not bitten. Chewed.
This is an example of an exclamatory sentence using the word happening!