The apple of your eye means a particular preference, or a loved one; the object of somebody's affections. So it means something very dear to you.
The idiom "apple of your eye" comes from the Old Testament of The Bible. It is in 4 verses, Deuteronomy 32:10, Psalm 17:8, Proverbs 7:2, and Zechariah 2:8.
"We all know that she is the apple of your eye."
This would mean that the female in this expression is the person you desire. The pupil is also known as the apple of the eye -- it is the source of focus; thus when someone is the apple of the eye, they are the focus, the center.
It is necessary to guard the apple of your eye from the jealous would-be suitors.
How can I be the apple of your eye?
An example of a sentence using the idiomatic expression 'apple of your eye' is 'I can see that your beautiful daughter is the apple of your eye.'
Wow Grandma, your apple pie is so good it blows Mom's apple pie out of the water!
In the sentence, "You ate an apple." the noun is apple, a word for a thing.
"Victory at the cost of cheating is like ashes in ones mouth"If something turns to ashes in one's mouth, it has become a bitter disappointment because it is devoid of true substance and lasting satisfaction. (The allusion is to Dead Sea fruit.)Dead Sea fruit; a name for a legendary fruit, of attractive appearance, which dissolved into smoke and ashes when held (also called apple of Sodom); figuratively, a hollow disappointing thing, perhaps because it was regarded as devoid of life or movement.
There is no pronoun in the saying "An apple a day keeps the doctor away."A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:"It keeps the doctor away." (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun phrase 'an apple a day', which is the subject of the sentence)"An apple a day keeps him away." (the pronoun 'him' takes the place of the noun 'doctor')
The noun is apple, a word for a thing.
After fifty years of marriage, she is still the apple of his eye.
I think you mean "apple PIE order," which means in very good order or very well organized.
simileThe phrase "as American as apple pie" is an example of both a simile and an expression.
the boy ate the apple predicate(ate the apple)
I was working on my core the other day. Another example sentence is: I ate the apple's core yesterday.
Apple and Sprint often collaborate together.
In the sentence "I ate an apple" the subject is I, the action or predicate is ate, and apple is the object, modified by the adjective an. you suck
Wow Grandma, your apple pie is so good it blows Mom's apple pie out of the water!
When you say "a" in a sentence it always has to be before a Constantin. On the other hand when you say "an" that will be before a vowel. For example: She wanted a apple. She wanted an apple. OR: She wanted a grape. She wanted an grape.
an apple a day keeps the doctor away
an is used before vowels for example an ant ate an apple
An anaphor is a word or phrase that refers back to and represents a previously mentioned noun or noun phrase. It is often used to avoid repetition and create cohesion in a sentence or text. For example, in the sentence "John ate an apple and he enjoyed it," "he" is an anaphor that refers back to John.