It depends on the context. If you mean "appears" as a verb as in "seems happy" you couldsimply use the word "seems". If you mean "appears" as in "becomes visible" you need to identify the cause - i.e. appeared in the team "was selected for the team. If you mean "appears in court" you could use "represented"
Renege is another word for revoke. It means to back out on a promise or contract. A good sentence would be, he thought he could renege the contract that he already signed.
Here is a sentence using the word exhibit:''Here is exhibit A.''Another sentence could be: I looked into the lion's exhibit at the zoo. There are multiple sentences you could come up with so make sure you think and create your own sentence and just use these as examples.
inquire, query, question, interrogate, examine, directions, quiz
The asafetida was used for research in the lab. Another good sentence for this word would be, the asafetida was ruined so it could not be used anymore.
a fragment
another word for appears could be comes up, shows up or arrives
I could use another chopstick, here.
Yes. "Could show" is a verb phrase, even when another word appears inside it. This word order is commonly used only in questions; the corresponding statement form would be "Your dad could show us the video of the game".
a soul that has died in one time and reborn in another
If you could write that question, then you already have the answer. It's a word followed by another. You can rarely write a sentence with only one word....
An anagram is a word or phrase spelled by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE
As another deadline loomed he worked as fast as he could.
His obvious contrivance was just another thin plot.
The future looks grim.The grim reaper loves kittens.Why do you look so grim?It appears to be another grim Monday.
The sentence could be correct if it followed a context sentence such as "Changing where the water is poured could help one plant to live." Otherwise, the word "but" makes this a dependent clause, not a sentence.
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".