me,who else
nobody could be as awesome as joanne keri h
to eat it!
you probs ate a pie?
I didn't eat a slice of pie, I ate a pie - so no slices are left.
the tocobagas ate berries pie is awesomethe tocobagas ate berries pie is awesome
It modifies how fast he ate the moon pie, or the speed of the actionHe devoured the moon pieHe savored the moon pie
She ate two thirds of the pie in one sitting!
I did :D
ate pie
The structure of the sentence "Mom knows who ate the last piece of pie but she won't tell" can be broken down into two main clauses. The first clause, "Mom knows who ate the last piece of pie," consists of a subject ("Mom"), a verb ("knows"), and a noun clause ("who ate the last piece of pie") acting as the object. The second clause, "but she won't tell," contains a subject ("she") and a verb phrase ("won't tell"), connected to the first clause by the conjunction "but."
1
He ate a lot of pie.
I did :D
The sentence "Mom knows who ate the last piece of pie but she won't tell" is structured as a compound sentence. It contains two independent clauses: "Mom knows who ate the last piece of pie" and "she won't tell," connected by the coordinating conjunction "but." The first clause includes a noun phrase ("Mom") as the subject and a verb phrase ("knows who ate the last piece of pie") as the predicate. The second clause also has a subject ("she") and a predicate ("won't tell").