My son stared at the sun ND GOT BINDED ;)
Merton Johnson is sun-sun johnson
The chloroplast soaked up the sun light that was essential to the plant.
I lay in the sun. (The verb in this sentence is intransitive, meaning it does not have an object, so you should use the past tense of the verb to lie, which is lay. The similar-meaning verb to lay, the past tense of which is laid, is a transitive verb, so the subject of the sentence would need to lay something "in the sun.")
To use the word bask you would need to write the sentence in the present tense. Example sentence: When I go to the beach I bask in the sun. (basked is in the past tense, will bask is in the future)
the sun has a photosphere.
Her son enjoyed the sun when on holiday.
A father always want that his son's future always shine like sun
You can use "sun" and "son" in a sentence by creating a context that highlights their different meanings. For example: "As the sun sets in the sky, my son plays in the backyard, enjoying the last rays of daylight." This sentence illustrates the contrast between the celestial body and the familial relation.
Son is a word that sounds exactly the same as sun, however has a different meaning. The way you tell these words apart is by how the words sound in a sentence. For instance the Earth orbits the Sun it would most likely mean the gigantic star in the middle of our solar system, but it is doubtful that the Earth orbits a person.
The Sun is a proper noun. However, it shines very brightly. 'it' is the pronoun for the 'Sun'. It is used incorrectly, because the word 'it' is in a different sentence. The correct usage would be 'The Sun is a proper noun, and it shines very brightly. The pronoun 'it' is now in the same sentence as the word 'Sun'
sun After a day in the warm sun, she had some color in her face.
* filius: son (subject in sentence) * filium: son (object in sentence) * filio: to/for son * filii: sons (subject in sentence) * filios: sons (object in sentence) * filiis: to/for sons The words with a bold "s" at the end is to emphasise that they are plural only. Note that Latin does not specify 'a' or 'the'; these words are taken from context.
The negation of the sentence the sun is shining would be that the sun is not shining.
The homophone of "sun" is "son." Both words are pronounced the same, but have different meanings, thus making them homophones.
A homophone for son is sun.
The sun is as hot as an oven.Is that what you mean?
no that would be sun block