it is an idea that you cant stope thinking about and that keeps on bathering you
I have no idea soz
"He sits by the table" is correct. "He is seated by the table" is also correct. The context in which you are using them may influence which you use and also what particular idea you want to get across.
It will be perfectly OK.
It depends on how heavy the person itself is. And the balloon. If the balloon is strong and a light person is sitting on it, it probably won't. If a heavy person is sitting on it, it might. And if it is a non strong balloon, and ANYBODY sits on it... it will.
I have no idea, I think they both do...
Heavy rain can be danger of liquefaction because of the wet mud that can cover the whole place that the earthquake took place in.
if he has a computer chair in his room you can loosen the connects so its loose so when he sits he falls :)
A common simile for "as heavy as" is "as heavy as a ton of bricks." This expression emphasizes an extreme weight, conveying the idea of something that is particularly burdensome or difficult to lift. It effectively illustrates the intensity of the weight in a vivid manner.
Early computers, back in the 40s-60s were HUGE, filled an entire room, took massive amounts of power, and were extremely heavy. Not at all practical for home use. A micro or minicomputer is just a computer that sits on your desk or table, or a tower that sits on the floor. That's all.
A prince sits on silver.
They're not really cheap. They're collectibles and are really heavy in order to give us an idea of how heavy the "real" lightsabers are.
"Sits" is the present tense.