The crime was severe enough to be handled directly by the Supreme Court.
The judge gave a severe sentence.
A severe thunderstorm was brewing.
Here are some sentences.
That was a severe thunderstorm with a lot of damage.
Her severe expression made me worry.
"I dont think that is the proper way to respond to that question"
You speak of Slavish as Slovenian or Slovenia, this is the proper way to say the word Slavish in a sentence.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "at" in certain cases, such as in informal speech or when emphasizing a location or time. For example, "Where are you going to meet me at?" However, in formal writing, it is generally better to rephrase the sentence to avoid ending with a preposition.
Opprobrium is contempt or severe criticism. An example sentence would be: Her opprobrium kind of rubbed everyone the wrong way.
He had severe pain in his gizzard he was holding his stomach to ease the pain
The proper way to use "me" in a sentence is as an object pronoun, typically after the verb or preposition. For example, "She gave the book to me," or "He is taller than me."
the million is the proper way to write it if you use it in a sentence
It depends how you use it in the sentence, it's correct if you are writing Kim is going to the shops.
Example sentence - The best way to describe her is to say she has a severe lack of integrity.
There are no proper nouns in the sentence. The noun in the sentence, statues, is not the name of a specific statue.
The proper way to say amusment in a sentence is " We had fun today in the amusment park" Or " the monkey was a great amusment at the party" those are some sentences you can use that have the word amusment in them.
The proper grammatical past tense of find out is "found out." "I didn't need to use the internet to help me with my homework as I already found out the answer in my textbook earlier this afternoon" is a proper way to use found out in a sentence with past tense.