The scowl on his face convinced me to not press any further into the matter.
The girl had a nasty scowl on her face when she did not get her way.
Either one or two, it depends if you pronounce it as scowl or as scow-wel.
You use the semi-colon when each part of the sentence is a complete thought and could actually be broken into a sentence of its own.
Scowl (slightly angrier).
you could use it as in; that was sic: meaning that was really good. :)xxx
The girl had a nasty scowl on her face when she did not get her way.
The big dog seemed to scowl at me.
why are you scowling
The word 'scowl' is a verb and a noun.Example sentences:I saw Rudy scowl as the teacher gave him his graded essay. (verb)My father was watching the news with a scowl on his face. (noun)
Her mother scowled at her after she took the toy away from her brother. Another good sentence would be, the woman scowled and always looks angry.The word 'scowled' is a verb, the past tense of the verb to scowl, meaning to frown or to make an angry face.Example: Ebeneezer scowled at the passerby who wished him well.
the teacher scowled angrily at the misbehaving student
The furious man scowled at me for wrecking his yard.
Either one or two, it depends if you pronounce it as scowl or as scow-wel.
IT IS A VERB:when your frownig. IT IS A NOUN:when your have a temper.
i hate that word, likewise, i use it in this sentence
The teacher scowled me when I stole a toy from the toy bin.
You just did, or you could just use the sentence "I don't know how to use overtaken in a sentence."