Misanthropic: My uncle is really misanthropic, he just won't see anyone.
Arcane: The arcane rules for these meetings really impede progress.
Insouciance: His insouciance will come back to bite him, if he doesn't study he will have to repeat his grade.
Mercurial: Teenagers can be so mercurial; they're sad and miserable one minute and happy, even chipper when a friend calls.
Sanguine: I'm sanguine about the upcoming lay off, I'm sure that it won't last long.
The floor is very hard.
no
My schedule is really hard to remember.
sole
It's hard to distinguish between the two twins.
the child hung on the tree
spick and span
masa senggang make sentences
"I give you" is actually three words, but here's a sentence. I give you two sentences instead of just one.
You can create 10 sentences with count nouns by using the words many bottles, few bottles, and a few bottles in different sentences. When using count nouns they can be preceded by much.
There are approximately 265,000 words in James Joyce's Ulysses, which translates to roughly 2650 sentences, give or take depending on sentence lengths.
The grammatically correct way to phrase this too-vague question is, "Can you give me more sentences with the words, already?" Note the pluralization of "sentence" and the additional comma.