Well gasped is a verb... so when you're attributing an action to a character or subject you can use it then.
Ex. Just as he though he would faint from lack of oxygen, he fought his way to the shore and gasped as though his lungs would never fill.
Here is a sentence- There is a word chlorophyll which I have so idea what i means.
You didn't write a sentence, you wrote a question. So there isn't a third word in that "sentence." Or if you are trying to be a smart aleck, "this sentence" also doesn't have three words, but in that case you didn't use correct punctuation. In either case it shows you don't really have a good grasp of the English language.
You can use the word "ion" in a sentence to describe an electrically charged atom or molecule, such as "When sodium loses an electron, it becomes a positively charged ion."
The element carbon is essential for life on Earth.
i like cheese that is molten! lol dont use this sentence im bored so i wrote it :)
The girl gasped after her teacher went away from her.
I gasped for air after being underwater for a long time.
"I gasped for breath at the sight of the astonishingly beautiful painting."
The word gasp is a verb. The past tense is gasped.
The hole crowd gasped at the sight of the renowned batter, stricking out.
That is the correct spelling of the word "gasped" (inhaled, as in shock or surprise).
"Arnold!" she gasped in amazement, "How did you know that?"
The girl gasped as she saw her disheveled hair in the mirror.
No, gasped can be a verb form or adjective (gasped breaths, gasped words). There is an adverb (gaspingly) formed from the present participle, gasping.
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.