As a noun, the slang word for a sure thing or favorite is usually hyphenated as shoe-in.
no shoe = singular shoes = plural
The past tense word for shoe is shod, you can even look it up in a dictionary. shoe is not a verb so it cant be in past tense but can have a past tense verb ex: i am wearing the shoe= i wore the shoe i have a cool shoe= i had a cool shoe [i have a cool pair of shoes= i had a cool pair of shoes] Shoe is a verb, as in shoe a horse, past tense shod
A homophone for shoe is "sue," which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
A "wedgie" is a noun. One type of wedgie is GIVEN, the other is WORN. The past tense would be "gave a wedgie" or "wore a wedgie" (the shoe).
shoe shoe
chacott if that is how you spell it
You just did. It is spelled Sketchers.
This seems to be a phonetic version of "how do you spell something that you aren't sure of" which would be an "uncertainty." (Which certainly applies here.)
That is the correct spelling of "boot" (type of shoe, German boat or ship).
Punky Brewster - 1985 The Shoe Must Go On Spell-Bound 1-10 was released on: USA: 16 November 1985
a shoe is 'une chaussure' (fem.), plural 'des chaussures'
This is likely a transposition of the plural noun "sketches" (drawings).*The trademark shoe brand is Skechers.
Bróga (boot, shoe) Coisbhearta (footgear/footwear) Buataisí (top-boot)
leprucawns < yhh that's not how ya spell it but yh
The correct spelling is converse (to engage in a conversation).Converse is also the correct spelling of the shoe brand.
The word may be soling (adding a sole to a shoe). Also Soling, a class of racing sailboat.
The closest common word is sketches (drawings), plural of sketch.The trademark brand name of shoe is Skechers.