grins
Actually there is a perfect word for "a broad smile." That word is beam.
There is one syllable in the word "smiles." The "e" is silent, and so smiles rhymes with miles and tiles.
smiles
No, the word 'smile' is a noun (smile, smiles) and a verb (smile, smiles, smiling, smiled).EXAMPLESnoun: She has a beautiful smile.verb: I saw him smile at you.
Because there's a MILE between the first letter and the last letter.
a giraffe is broadly.
Actually there is a perfect word for "a broad smile." That word is beam.
The word for a person who hardly smiles is "stoic" or "unsmiling."
Smiles. It was a brain teaser question like "What is the longest word?". Smiles is a long word, because it has the word "mile" in it and mileS are long. The longest word in the English dictionary is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis. If you don't believe it is a real word, copy and paste the word and look it up.
Smiles can be a noun or a verb. Noun: the plural of smile. "There were smiles all around the room." Verb: Third-person singular simple present of the verb smile. "She smiles at the picture"
There is one syllable in the word "smiles." The "e" is silent, and so smiles rhymes with miles and tiles.
Smiles - because there is a mile between the first letter and the last. If you mean that more literally, the Supercalifragilisticexpialodocius is another.
No, the word "smiles" does not require an apostrophe. It is a plural noun formed by simply adding "s" to the singular form "smile."
Yes, "smiler" is a word. It refers to someone who smiles frequently or easily.
The word could be mission, or more broadly utility or application.
The word is "SMILES".
Portal. More broadly, entree´and access.