I poured the boiling hot water over my teabag, and read a few pages of the new John Grisham novel as my tea steeped.
pervaded, filled, imbued, perfused, charged, suffused, steeped, impregnated, informed, penetrated, saturated, transfused
Exposition
Yes, elements in a sentence are capitalized, such as proper nouns, the first word of a sentence, and titles.
Water is typically the solvent used to prepare tea. When tea leaves are steeped in hot water, the water acts as a solvent to extract the flavor, color, and nutrients from the tea leaves, resulting in a tea infusion.
The subject in the sentence "clean your room" is "you."
A pot of tea steeped slowly by the fire.
After the green tea had steeped for two minutes, it was ready to serve. Our little town was steeped in history.
This teabag was steeped in boiling hot water for about ten minutes.
To steep is a verb meaning to soak in liquid, so steeped is the past tense. Steeped can also be an adjective meaning filled, saturated, permeated. Here are examples of its use: "She steeped the herbs for 15 minutes to make her tea." "They were overwhelmed by the thought that the castle was so steeped in centuries of history." "The steeped tea was too strong."
Arthur knew as soon as he entered the Maxus Club, that ritual there was steeped in tradition, because he could see that every man wore a tux and every woman wore a cocktail dress. Tonight was new member initiation.
To steep is to soak in liquid. Tea is steeped in boiling water to bring the taste out. Figuratively, to be soaked in an idea or style. "The haunted house was steeped in spookiness."
The cast of Steeped - 2008 includes: October Moore as Dana Juliana Tobon as Neighbor
There is no one region that you could pick out, so it can be said that all around Ireland there are places steeped in culture.
Coffee should be steeped in a French press for about 4 minutes to achieve the best flavor extraction.
There is 1 syllable.
you mean an A frame?
none