pro-duce:
n, agricultural products and especially fresh fruits and vegetables as distinguished from grain and other staple crops
"At your local farmer's market, you can find a wide variety of seasonal, often organically grown produce, including tomatoes, peaches, corn, and green beans."
"A premium grocery store, like Whole Foods, will carry locally grown, organic produce, like kale, collard greens, and strawberries."
Your question is a good sentence using the word "common".
Dropping a pencil in the water will produce ripples.
a good sentence is "I cannot use oversimplification in a sentence." that sentence is oversimplification.
I am a genius
Someone should answer it!
The contextual use of certain words is important for them to make sense.
Use of 'contextual' in a sentence: What dress one wears is contextual as it depends on certain occasions that one wears a particular type of dress.
A fertile soil will produce a good crop of carrots.
"There is contextual evidence to suggest that the author of this question is an idiot and shouldn't post their homework on the internet."
I like to produce artwork.
what is a good sentence for the word opposite
A good sentence for the word baffled is:
Contextual means to view information as a whole- both the facts and where they came from. Example: A technique for determing meaning from unfamiliar vocabulary words is to look at the other words in the sentence for clues. It is commonly referred to as "using contextual clues."
Any sentence that properly uses the word additionally is a good sentence. Additionally, the above is a great sentence.
Your question is a good sentence using the word "common".
"I am using a sentence with the word economics."
Contextual spelling is when the spelling of a word depends on how it is being used in the sentence. In American English, many words that used to depend on context are now reduced to just one spelling of the word in all contexts. For example, the word "practice" vs "practise". In American English, only "practice" is used. However, traditionally, "practice" is used only as a noun, while "practise" is a verb. As a noun: "In order be that good, one must have lots of practice." The verbs in this sentence are 'be' and 'have', while 'practice' is a noun; something that you have. As a verb: "What do I do for a living? I practise medicine." The verb in the second sentence is "practise," while medicine is acting as the subject; something being practised. Essentially, contextual spelling is words that sound the same but are spelled differently depending on the situation. They're/their/there could also each, technically, be considered that type of word.