You have to guess how
because if it was a a educated guess it would be called a educated guess
Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha Rachel is a dyke. Guess who?? Haha
Guess What was created in 1983.
Yes, the noun 'guess' is a common noun; a general word for an estimate or conjecture; a word for any guess of any kind.The word 'guess' is also a verb: guess, guesses, guessing, guessed.
She sloppily ate the dinner.
No, "sloppily" is an adverb, not a verb. It describes how an action is done, typically in a careless or untidy manner.
Sloppily is an adverb. The adjective form is sloppy.
I can write sloppily in any form. Just kidding. To create the superlative form of an adverb, put the word "most" in front of it. This was the most sloppily written answer of the evening.
It is sloppily.
No. The words sloppy and sloppier are adjectives. The adverb form is "sloppily" and the comparative form is "more sloppily."
The word 'sloppily' is the adverb form of the adjective sloppy.An adverb modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
You could say "I worked so sloppily in my homework last night" or "I always write so sloppily that's why I don't like my writing" if you want to ask any more questions. I am here to answer it. I am cici123123!
Messily, without due care.
Untidy, messy, careless, slipshod. Watery and unappetizing food, eating sloppily. Dressing with loose and baggy clothes. Overly emotional.
Messily, without due care.
the answer is simper