The word "roost" appears on page 30 of the book "Walk Two Moons" by Sharon Creech.
The word "percolate" is on page 171 of the book "Walk Two Moons" by Sharon Creech.
The word "mopey" does not appear in the book "Walk Two Moons" by Sharon Creech.
Page numbers are different in every book, and sullen is used many times in this story. One notable time is in chapter 41. The quote was "The chickens were fidgety, the cows were skittish, and the pigs were sullen and glum." It was in the beginning of the chapter, while she was talking about staying the night at Phoebe's house.
Roost is a noun (a roost) and a verb (to roost).
Yes, the word 'roost' is both a noun (roost, roosts) and a verb (roost, roosts, roosting, roosted).The noun 'roost' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a place where birds regularly settle or congregate to rest at night.
The word roost is both a noun (roost, roosts) and a verb (roost, roosts, roosting, roosted). Example uses: Noun: The trees along White Street are a popular evening roost for crows. Verb: The crows only stay long enough to rest. I don't know where they roost overnight.
roost
The chicken roosts in the hen.
roost
The moons phase tonight is full
In the book "Walk Two Moons" by Sharon Creech, Broc-Len-Cas is a made-up word that Phoebe and Sal use to describe a mysterious character they see outside Phoebe's house. It is meant to be a playful way for the girls to refer to the stranger without revealing his true identity.
Moons are given names so that we can know which moon to which planet one is talking about. The word moon comes from a Greek word meaning month.