Quel beau jardin de roses! ~ What a beautiful rose garden!
two beautiful butterflies were seen in the garden. what is the limiting adjective in the sentence?
(Wizened is an archaic term for dried, shriveled, or wrinkled.)The beautiful woman was, in reality, a wizened old hag with evil powers.He removed the wizened remains of the rose bush from the garden.
two beautiful butterflies were seen in the garden. what is the limiting adjective in the sentence?
her garden was so beautiful that it can easeily catch one ' s eyes.
There are 2 sentence fragments, which are: A When we stopped by the garden (what then?) Example: When we stopped by the garden, we found it was closed. D Stopping by the garden we saw (what, needs an object). Example: Stopping by the garden, we saw the vandalism done to the rose bushes. These two are correct as sentences. B Stop by the garden. (the subject You is assumed). C We stopped; she didn't. (Notice the semi-colon used to connect the two ideas.)
The rose is beautiful.
Yes,'What a beautiful garden' is a exclamatory sentence.
The White House Rose Garden is a scenic view of all the beautiful flowers!!!
in rose garden
There are many rose bushes in his garden.
The nouns in the sentence are: Mother design gardener garden (note: rose is also a noun but used as an adjective in this sentence)
I planted a beautiful flower in my garden.
There is a beautiful garden in the park.
Yes, the name of a specific plant should be capitalized in a sentence, just like any proper noun. For example: "I planted a beautiful Rose in my garden."
The metaphor in the sentence "she is a rose in full bloom" is comparing the woman to a blooming rose, suggesting that she is beautiful, vibrant, and at the peak of her life or potential.
Granmother
I really didn't mean to destroy your rose garden.