One witch will watch one watch and the other witch will watch the other watch.
Yes, the word watches is a noun, a plural, common, concrete noun, the singular form is a watch; for example: John received two watches as graduation gifts. The word watches is also a verb (watch, watches, watching, watched).
HE IS ALWAY WATCHING YOU LOOKING FOR HIM BUT HE WATCHES EVERYONE DREAM ABOUT DREAMNG ABOUT HIM WATCHING YOU AND YOU NOT BEING ABLE TO SEE HI WATCh YOU.
just keep watching
That is the correct spelling of "watches" (plural noun or present tense).
I/you/we/they watch. He/she/it watches. The present participle is watching.
People watching a sport are the spectators.
If you are noticing a lot of clocks and watches you might be worried about the time. You are either in a rush or you are waiting for something to happen.
Most people don't start watching the soaps until they are teenagers. Depending on whether or not your mom watches the soaps, some people may start watching them when they are younger.
You can either stop watching it, or edit your watch. I prefer to edit watches, so what you would do is go to Messages> Deviantant Watches. Look for the group you are watching's deviations. There will be a V-style arrow next to an X. Click the V and select "edit deviant watch for". This will show a menu where you can select what you want to watch, and also quit watching. , awesometwostudios
Watches is already a verb when used in the right context.Other verbs are watch, watching and watched. Depending on the tenses.Some example sentences are:"I will watch this film"."He watches the dogs play"."I like watching the tea brew"."I watched the TV last night".
When you find out let me know. My husband is 35 and almost only watches cartoons (currently watching Robot Chicken) or Star Wars.
It means you can't shower dive and swim with it but it can be wet as in wet from the rain or washing your hands