It means you bought it, it's yours and you get to keep it as long as you want.
Bought , party
The former ie "I bought a scanner off you" or "I bought a scanner from you"
Yes, 'bought' is a past tense verb. "I bought the bread." Therefore, the bread is receiving the action of the verb, 'bought', as the direct object of the sentence. 'I' is the subject, performing the action, 'bought.' "The bought bread tasted good." This is a different way of phrasing "The bread was bought, and it tasted good. This shows that the sentence has a compound verb, and bought is not an adjective. Don't be fooled!
Some words that does not mean appreciate is ingrate, ungrateful, and thankless. An example sentence is: My son is ungrateful for the apple watch, laptop, and iPhone 6 I bought him last year for Christmas.
what does bought in costs mean
Cheannaigh in Irish means bought Cheannaigh mé is I bought
elkanah
you bought a new "mini" what? what are you referring to? you bought a new "mini" what? what are you referring to?
If you mean the plural it is bought.
If you mean "who BOUGHT YouTube?" The answer is Google.
came or bought together again
He thinks that you have a lot of money and should pay him back for what he bought. or maybe he bought somehting nice for you and he wants to prove a point that he bought it.
When you say software i guess you mean games if you mean games then no if you dont then wait for someone else to answer
He/she bought for him/her/usted(you, polite)
no ida
anything bought or sold