God's wrath caused him to send down lightning bolts and kill your mother.
Use is present. Used is past. The correct sentence is, This is used for....
it can be used by putting it in front of the sentence and you make the variable a point
you just used it in a sentence
us the world whirl in a sentence
"What the matter" cannot be used in any sentence. "What is the matter?" can be a question.
The word wrath can be used as a noun. Examples: "Feel my never-ending wrath." "The guilty man faced the judge's wrath."
fear my wrath.
The wrath of Tutenkhamun thundered down upon his cowering servants.
The man's fiery wrath killed the woman's dog.
The man exploded all his wrath onto his little child
The wrath of God was rained down upon them for their actions.
no
"Displease me and you will feel my wrath!""I felt the wrath of God.""I waited until my initial wrath had eased before voicing my complaint"(found on merriam weberter) (: lol
My parents' wrath is not worth missing my curfew.
Greek mythology is full of stories about flawed humans who somehow endure the wrath of jealous gods.
"Wrath" is usually described as a demonstration of strong and fierce force. So...you could say, for example "Feel my wrath!", or something to that effect.
violent or unrestrained anger;fury;rage Part of speech: noun