It's True.
Yes, but strangely he's the only one that won't admit it. She posted a photo of them on her twitter recently after they had hiked a mountain. There are also pic of them on JustJared.
I have been to the top. In the late 90's my parents took our family to Mt Rushmore and a park ranger escorted us to the top. There was a trail that went up the side of the mountain followed by a long staircase that went directly behind Lincoln's head. I saw the hall of records and then hiked to the top of Washington's head. I was probably 10 or 11 years old at the time, so I'm sure access is more restricted now. But the answer is yes, you can go to the top of Mt Rushmore. And no, you don't need to be wealthy, or a government bigwig. You just have to have friends in the right places.
They were young women in the 1920's who were rebellious and wore makeup, talked openly about sex and drank. Flappers were naughty girls who wore their hair "bobbed", short dresses (all the way up to the knee!), rode around unchaperoned with boys in cars, drank illegal bathtub gin, danced wild and "immoral" dances like the Charleston, possibly had sex, and generally tried to have a good time. This was all fairly scandalous at the time. Most girls were not flappers. (Bobbed hair was hair cut short, sort of between the ears and the shoulders).
Is the following sentence true or false? If you hiked to the top of a tall mountain, you would pass through a serious of biomes.
The simple predicate is hiked, and the complete predicate is hiked up the mountain.
Hiked up e.g. I hiked up the mountain
Up is the preposition.
Yes for example "The voyager hiked on a mountain. "
It changes the tense of the word to past tense, meaning that it was already done. "We hiked the mountain" means that we did it already, and the action is complete. Saying "We hike the mountain" would mean that we do it regularly.
The sentence is in past tense.
Mount Fuji in Japan was the most hiked mountain in the world, until a road to the summit cut down the number of hikers. Mt Grand Monadnock in New Hampshire is now the most hiked mountain in the world. Pike's Peak is probably number three.
It changes the tense of the word to past tense, meaning that it was already done. "We hiked the mountain" means that we did it already, and the action is complete. Saying "We hike the mountain" would mean that we do it regularly.
Mt Fuji is famous because it is the second most hiked mountain in the world
only a few hardly trappers actually settled in Oregonians adventurous men hiked through the regions vast forests, trapping animals and living off the land....
Yes, "Bill and he" is the compound subject of the sentence. The pronoun "he" is a subjective personal pronoun.