Take a picture of the remains of your homework near the dog, and bring it to the teacher as proof... That's what I did when my cat ate mine. If your teacher will accept it or not depends on the teacher.
Because the teacher say it is just a piece of cake. '-'
Say your dog ate it.
Well to not get homework you have to cover the whole lesson and not ask the teacher any because you will be like "miss don't we get homework ?" and she would say "oh yes do some research about...."
Enough to make it a running joke
To say My dog likes to eat dog food in Spanish, is:Mi perro gusta comer alimentos para perros.
mi pero se comio mi tarea
Say when the teacher gives you homework, "Please and no thank you." My girlfriend sent me a thing that said: Student: Teacher can I ask you a question? Teacher: Yes go ahead. Student: would you be mad at me for something I didn't do? Teacher: No of course not. Student: I DIDN'T do my homework! I said that once and everyone laughed so ****ing hard. It was so funny. I didn't even get in trouble.
There are rules (laws of your country) about children attending school. These will be followed by your school and teacher. If there is no valid reason for you not to attend school (eg you are gravely ill in hospital) then your teacher will report your absence to the government authorities and your parents, guardian or carer may be prosecuted. There is no reason, under normal circumstances, for your teacher to spend the time setting you special homework after your teacher has already taken the time to prepare your class lessons.
she was trying to add a lesson no spaces
No, you can say "I have a lot of homework." Or "I have to much homework"
An infinate amount. They can be anywhere from the dog ate it to I was abducted by aliens and they wiped my memory of all my homework or, my personal favorite, my homework ate the dog so we had to put it in the pound!
No, It would be "The dog has eaten," or "The dog ate."Eat is the present tense. You want to match the tenses. If the dog is presently eating, you could say, "The dog eats." But if you are referring to the past eating behavior of the dog, it is as above, the dog has eaten, or the dog ate. I eat, you eat, they eat, is all present tense. Ate and eaten are both past tense, I have eaten, or I ate, etc.