ashes from dead people were mixed in with plaster and spread on the walls of houses Edinburgh history
The verb phrase in this sentence is "were getting"
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to plaster) and can be used as an adjective (e.g. a plastered wall). The adjective is also slang for "drunk."
Picking flowers, do you love them or not, it NOT a phrase!
come to me. lets emabrase
Aviation etiquette.
Take Home Handyman - 2007 Getting Plastered Hunter and Will 1-2 was released on: USA: 31 March 2007
He plastered the drywall.
in Victorian times builders added beer to their plaster mix to make it adhere better especially on mouldings
Plastered Confessions was created in 2003.
The probable derivation of this phrase is an allusion to tradesmen, who owned their own tools and took them with them in a bag or sack when they were dismissed from employment.
The duration of Caught Plastered is 1.13 hours.
The phrase 'come full circle' refers to getting back to the original position or the original state of affairs. The origin of the phrase is unknown, but is used in the Western world.
The verb phrase in this sentence is "were getting"
Plastered - 1930 was released on: USA: 1930
Plastered in Paris was created on 1966-04-05.
Caught Plastered was created on 1931-09-05.
Which phrase does not come from the Preamble to the Constitution?