Meaning "very cautious or suspicious," the term "chary" is uncommon but still useful in contemporary English. One example-sentence for it is as follows: "While he was chary of spending his own money, he felt quite unrestrained about spending others'. "
You use alcohol in a sentence by asking the question, "How do you use alcohol in a sentence?"OK,sorry, how about: Whisky contains alcohol.Alcohol is bad for you because it damages your heart.
Here is a sentence- There is a word chlorophyll which I have so idea what i means.
**Use it as a adjective**Water is a nonflammable liquid. **Use it a noun** Firemen must use nonflammable liquids to put out a fire.
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."
She looked grim and bitter as she recounted the events of the day.
She was very shary with her friends
The superhero was chary about talking to the journalist, for his secret identity could be compromised.
"Chary" is an adjective. It can take "of something" as a complement, and then it will follow the noun it modifies. The chary lawyer, the chariest person, a man chary of his time
Chinthamani Ragoonatha Chary was born in 1822.
Chinthamani Ragoonatha Chary died on 1880-02-05.
chary
While I don't believe "Chary" means anything, "Cherry" means a Cherry fruit. Sorry if that was not a typo, but that was all I could think of.
the word is actually "chary" and it means cautious. Generally, a girl referring to herself as chary would be hesitant to engage in sexual acts.
all depends on the size. Usually tall.
Cynthia Berrios goes by Chary.
Frederick B. Chary has written: 'The Bulgarian Jews and the final solution, 1940-1944' -- subject(s): Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jews, Politics and government
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