a similie man
if someone eats like a pig(very noisly) u may say to him "you eat like a pig"..this is a similie.you may also asay"you are a pig".. then it is a metaphor.but you can also say"Pig!" to that person.. this is called hypocatastasis. here u r impling that he is a pig or he is like a pig without mentioning it in i sentence.
In the sentence, "You ate an apple." the noun is apple, a word for a thing.
Yes, the pink pig is big is a complete sentence since it includes a subject (the pig) and an action (is big).
Ate the cake is a fragment because there is no subject. To be a complete sentence, it must have a subject and a verb. You would need to change it to, I ate the cake, or She ate the cake, or so on.
The sentence is a jumbled one for confusion. The actual sentence is, The brown cow ate the grass.
The pig ate from the trough.
yes it looked like big fat hairy, the hungry pig that ate the world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! yes it looked like big fat hairy, the hungry pig that ate the world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A large pig ate the slop.Sam played with a bouncy ball.Have you seen a missing cat?
he killed a pig and ate it of course.
it depends! if the mouse had rabies or a bad sickness then the guinea pig coud POSSIBLE die. but not very likely.
Hes as big as a horse that's ate a pig and that pig ate a dog and the dog ate a cat and the cat ate a fish and the fish ate a spider and the spider at a fly and the little old lady said why did i eat a fly!
One would be crying and throwing his or her guinea pig
The guinea pig's eyes bulged like a telescope.
if someone eats like a pig(very noisly) u may say to him "you eat like a pig"..this is a similie.you may also asay"you are a pig".. then it is a metaphor.but you can also say"Pig!" to that person.. this is called hypocatastasis. here u r impling that he is a pig or he is like a pig without mentioning it in i sentence.
Ate is intransitive in that sentence. There is no direct object."You ate pizza in the cafeteria" is an example of ate as a transitive verb (pizza is the direct object).
ateKa pronounced (ATE-KAYE)
In the sentence, "You ate an apple." the noun is apple, a word for a thing.