Janet got so wet from the rain, she had to wring out her sodden clothes.
I have to fight again in that stinky wring
The past tense of "wring" is "wrung."
No, you do not always need to put a comma after the word "so" if it is the first word in a sentence. It depends on the context and flow of the sentence.
Example sentence - The twin children had separate classrooms in elementary school.
You can put the word revising in a sentence like this :My cousin was revising her essay before she turned it in.
I have to fight again in that stinky wring
"When washing by hand, you twist the clean clothes to wring out the water." "If you wring out that washcloth on my game, I'm going to wring your neck!" "All the distraught family could do was to wring their hands and wait."
The word is wring (as in to wring out a wet cloth).
The past tense of "wring" is "wrung."
I dont know lol
I put the word wool in a ten word sentence.
see How do you put the word countries in a sentence?
When the washing machine broke down, I had to wring out the clothes by hand
When she went to wring out the washing, she realized that her ring was gone. The farmer couldn't find his ax, so he had to wring the chicken's neck and got blood on his school ring.
Wring.
The word is put in a sentence like I just did right now.
you have just put it in a sentence....