Yes it is very good
To be baleful means to be threatening or menacing. For example, "The bull sent a baleful glance at the intruder as he munched on a blade of grass".
The verb in the sentence, 'munched' is a transitive verb, a verb that takes an object.An intransitive verb requires no object, for example: The rabbit munched the lettuce and slept. (no object required for the verb 'slept')The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (The rabbit is white. rabbit=white); or the subject becomes the object (The rabbit got wet. rabbit->wet).The rabbit is not and does not become the lettuce.
Munched on a carrot .
graham the sheep munched on a pickled pickle
Someone who munched on other peoples butts
Well a chipmunk once munched on my carrot so i would say yes.
brunch, lunch, munch, hunch...lunchbunchpunchmunch
Cookies and milk. I have seen it he can NOT resist them I think he even knew I was spying on him but still he munched away on those delicouse treats!!!!
i think your psp is a bit munched!!!
munch lunch bunch punch
Where do you keep all your crops? Do you have any Straw?
None, intentionally. By definition they are herbivores, plant eaters. But anything small enough to be hidden in a mouthful of grass or leaves might get munched up by accident.