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I opened all the window in my house to get some ventilation.
The farmer moved his herd of cattle into the milking barn.
My breath was misty in the cold winter air. When I am angry, I take a deep breath and it helps me feel much more calm. Take a deep breath here, as you have nearly finished!
He painted the window still.
I had to think about this for a moment. Yes, it is correct if the underlying assumption is that the boy in fact broke the window, and he is not willing to admit it. If he did not break the window, it is probably better stated as "The boy denied breaking the window".
No. He sat by the window is correct. He sits by the window is the correct use of sit.
To fix the run-on sentence, you can separate it into two sentences: "Rajeet opened the window. He loved the smell of a rainstorm."
There is not an adverb in the sentence "They opened a window because the room was too hot." You could easily add an adverb though, like so: "They quickly opened a window because the room was too hot."
His breath fogged up the cool glass of the window as he watched the steady fall of our Winter's first snow.
Sliding doors are taking the place of windows.
The adverb form of the word "accident" is accidentally.An example sentence is: "he accidentally knocked the window cleaner unconscious when he opened the window".
i think the symbol is the opened window. cause the whole story was about the opened window and the story said"they will walk through that opened window.
The adverb is too because it modifies the adjective, which is 'hot'.
Which spelling you use depends on which part of speech you're using--"breathe" is for the verb, "breath" is the noun. So you breathe heavily after a ten-mile run, but your breath fogs up the window on a cold day.
Yes. Example sentence: We could hear the bees buzzing outside our window.
I opened all the window in my house to get some ventilation.
The farmer moved his herd of cattle into the milking barn.