She was blessed with a baby girl.
No, that's quite bad. It should be ...you have been blessed with a baby girl this morning. Or you could say ...you have been blessed with a baby girl today. Today morning is never said. You can say yesterday morning, or tomorrow morning.
As the hopeful parents awaited the arrival of their baby, they started to wonder if it was a boy or a girl.
the correct answer is theirs a boy and a girl in the car
Heres an example: What is the question that contains the word cantaloupe for no apparent reason?
In the sentence "The little girl chased a chipmunk" the nouns are "girl" and "chipmunk."
No, that's quite bad. It should be ...you have been blessed with a baby girl this morning. Or you could say ...you have been blessed with a baby girl today. Today morning is never said. You can say yesterday morning, or tomorrow morning.
By itself, no. It would be correct to ask, "Does she have a baby girl?" Otherwise, you'd either use present-tense, "She has a baby girl," or past-tense, "She had a baby girl"
Not quite, it should be, "Do the surgery regardless of whether it is a boy or a girl."
Yes because she is a baby
"It is correct to say 'She is a girl like me.' The pronoun 'me' is the correct choice in this sentence because it is the object of the preposition 'like.'"
It is what you will hear in informal speech, but is not correct for formal writing. Try: "That is the girl.", "That is the woman.", "That is my sister.", "That is my wife.", etc. The grammatically correct form of the sentence 'That is her' is 'That is she.'
- To predict the sex of a baby: suspend a wedding band held by a piece of thread over the palm of the pregnant woman. If the ring swings in an circular or oval motion the baby will be a girl. If the ring swings in a straight line the baby will be a boy. ALSO IF YOU NIP YOUR CHIN AND THERE'S A LINE (WRINKLE) THAN YOU ARE BLESSED WITH A GIRL IF YOU GET A BUMP ON YOUR CHIN YOU ARE BLESSED WITH A BOY.
I think the correct definition is Latino
If it's a boy, nephew, and a girl, niece
amy was potentially expecting a baby boy, but instead got a baby girl.
The couple flew to China to adopt a baby girl.
(The spelling baby's is possessive. The plural of baby is babies.)"The baby's room was decorated in pink as the parents hoped that they would have a girl.""The baby's shoe had clogged up the toilet."