I dread going to work today, because I know the work that is waiting for me.
He was filled with dread at the thought of another night in the jungle.
He had a dread that she was going to kiss him.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
How do you use the word decibel in a sentence?What is decibel used for?
the word rag in a sentence
dreadful, awful
use the word "an" in a sentence
For a good translation, use it in a sentence. Too many possibles.
Stacie the cat made a dreadful screech after her meal.
The meal yesterday was dreadful.There was a dreadful smell coming from the drain.
His superciliousness was apparent in the dreadful way he treated the waiter.
The dreadful secret of the murder is a chronic mystery.
I say, it appears as though that dreadful smoking volcano is about to erupt.
It depends. :) Or go to this grammar website: www.chompchomp.com
No, the word 'dreadful' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a dreadful storm, dreadful manners).The word 'dreadful' is the adjective form of the abstract noun dread, a word for an emotion.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'dreadful' is dreadfulness, a word for a quality or condition.
Nice, pleasant, heart-warming, dreadful, and frightful are words that could replace great in the example sentence provided above.
Hideously is an adverb or adjective describing something said or done in a horrible, ugly, revolting, or dreadful manner. Example Sentence: After dark, we sat around the camp fire telling hideously scary stories.
Both sentences are grammatically correct but have slightly different meanings. "What dreadful weather" is a statement expressing bad weather conditions. "What a dreadful weather" is a sentence fragment and would need to be completed with a verb or noun to make sense in a sentence.
A rear of open spaces.having agoraphobia is dreadful because you wouldn't even be able to leave your house.