Covet is used when you really really really really want something that usually is cherished by someone else. usually something you keep to yourself ie/ I covet my sister's jewel encrusted music box. or I secretly covet the first place trophy.
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife"
to covet another's property.
Her languid attempt to seduce me was not totally meaningful to me. Her emphatic plea was totally meaningful at the time.
Mya's little sister, Keeko, coveted me into getting her a Wii Pony, but I told her there was no such thing.
His issues lye more with attention rather than immaturity.
give a sentence voluminous is used in
to covet another's property.
There are plenty of ways you could use the word covet in a sentence. You could advise someone not to covet their neighbor for example.
no, i cannot use "bilateral" in a meaningful sentence.
The Bible teaches us not to covet our neighbours wife, which is lamentable.
use loaves in a meaningful sentence
The philosopher examines what is meaningful in life and thought. The project had no meaningful results and was canceled.
You are ignorant.
Her languid attempt to seduce me was not totally meaningful to me. Her emphatic plea was totally meaningful at the time.
I coveted my brothers shoes and was punished by doing chores for taking them without asking.
I can only hope that my studies were adequate.
When drunk, David was full of meaningful remarks; at least, they seemed meaningful until the cold light of morning stripped away their sense.
Yes, but it is still wrong. Grammatically correct is not the same as meaningful. Assuming you mean "yield for all time," use "give up for ever" instead of "...for never."