Claudia and Jamie are characters from From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. It is a book for children. Elaine Lobl Konigsburg assumes that children do not know what an Egyptian tomb looks like so she has to do a good job describing it.
Pearl was very happy when waiting for his food. This is a book.
Waited
Claudia and Jamie ran away from home in the book "From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler" by E.L. Konigsburg because they wanted to run away and have an adventure. They were seeking independence, excitement, and a sense of freedom from the constraints of their everyday lives.
The past of wait is waited: I waited for the bus, I had waited for the bus for over an hour.
I found I had waited to no avail. As the patient feral cat waited for a passing mouse, he seemed frozen in place prior to his pounce. I waited and waited for for my waiter, but I just had to get out of my waders.
The narrator likely waited to tell his story in "The Scarlet Ibis" because he needed time to process the events and emotions surrounding his brother's death. By reflecting on the past and the impact of his actions, he gained a better understanding of the story he needed to share with others.
The past participle of "wait" is "waited." For example, "I have waited for hours for the bus to arrive."
at usona, a furniture store on south street in philadelphia Before the furniture store she was at David Yurman in KofP. She waited on me there 2 years ago and was actually very helpful.
The word 'ardent' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun as passionate, enthusiastic, or devoted.Example: The ardent fans waited in the rain for their idol to arrive.
No one waited.
It is an adverb qualifying the verb waited.
The present tense of "waited" is "wait."