Yes. I was walking with my cousin and my brother and it was kinda late. Well we were walking down a road and one was walking across and they screamed and I stopped it with my shoe. When I relized it was a cockroach I screamed and Jumped on it. I looked at it and it was twitching!I was wearing my size 10 flipflops. (I get my feet from my dad...) But why did you honeslty want to know this???Outta curiostiy.
Nope. But I should disclose that I am one of these women who has no problems stepping on and squashing bugs and insects. I doubt there is a pair of shoes I own that I have not been wearing that sometime another I have squashed some kind of bug while wearing them. I am not just talking about ants or maybe the occasional beetle but stuff like cockroaches, slugs, and snails. Do ever think about if you lick enough shoe soles that some time another you are going to lick a shoe sole that just 2 hours before had had a squashed cockroach worked into the leather sole. Good luck.
The past progressive tense of "wear" is "was/were wearing." This tense is used to describe an ongoing action of wearing something in the past.
The sentence "What are you wearing on your ear?" is grammatically correct. It is asking someone to describe what they have on their ear.
depreciation
she describes the clothes Dee is wearing.
that they looked like they were wearing pajamas.
Approximately 70% of drowning victims were not wearing life jackets or personal flotation devices (PFDs) at the time of the incident. This statistic underscores the importance of wearing PFDs while engaging in water-related activities, as they can significantly increase safety and reduce the likelihood of drowning.
daring, sharing, wearing, bearing
The commander may not be involved in the rescue or incident beyond directing from a safe distance.
If your talking about the statue of Athena in the Parthenon then she was wearing a Greek chiton and had all of her battle armor on.
Some thing that describe Kesha are, shes crazy, she LOVES dancing, shes CRAZY beatifull...and she likes wearing her own style of clothes called "Garbage chick".
Yes, Frank Gifford was famously caught wearing pantyhose during a segment of "Monday Night Football" in 1976. The incident occurred when he and his fellow commentators were discussing a player and Gifford was playfully shown wearing the hosiery as a joke. It became a memorable moment in sports broadcasting history, highlighting the lighter side of football commentary.