Someone has asked a useless question on Answers.com and I am answering it.
You can use the word "fellow" to refer to someone as a male colleague, peer, or member of a group. For example, "He is a fellow doctor at the hospital."
To use the word "verbose" in a sentence, you could say, "His speech was so verbose that it became difficult to follow his main points." This sentence conveys the idea that someone's speech was excessively long-winded and complicated.
I mistook her for someone else at the party last night.
The definition of swamper is someone that lives or works in a swamp or someone who is very familiar with swamps. To use he word in a sentence, you would use it as a noun. The swamper used a boat to get to his home.
I'm so furious with you that I am not answering that!
how do you use the word ascribe in a sentence.
someone who has a psion
Only use the word you when you are having a conversation with someone you are talking about!
I can understand someone asking how to use the word 'antidisestablishment' in a sentence, but how do you have the audacity to ask how to use the word 'me' in a sentence when you've already used the same word twice in your question?
Obviously in is not beneath you dignity to have someone else write this sentence for you.
An acquaintance is someone you know, but you are not friends.
I saw someone Building a house.
You are capable of using the word capable in a sentence. The cat is capable to jump on the counter top.
You can use the word "fellow" to refer to someone as a male colleague, peer, or member of a group. For example, "He is a fellow doctor at the hospital."
What a loathsome thing if someone talking about worms.
He had an intraocular injury when someone threw a pencil.
you bedazzled me till i was speechless