"Youd" is not a valid word in English. It may be a misspelling or typo of "you'd," which is a contraction of "you would" or "you had." Can you provide more context or clarification so I can better understand your question?
Yes, the word spring is a preporsition as explained below... it preposes that you want someone to 'spring' at you or you want to 'spring' at someone 'id so spring at her' meaning youd pounce on her more easily explained as you go for her sexually hope this helped
The girls were mean to the new arrivals. They did not mean to be hurtful. The mean of the numbers was not what they had expected.
I do not mean all people, but some people act lazy.I do not mean to bother you but I need your help.
'Colour' is the correct English spelling. 'Color' is the Americanised version. In the UK its colour and since we made the language youd think it would remain colour but OBVIOUSLY some people feel they can alter this language however they feel!
Present tense: I/you/we/they mean. He/she/it means. The present participle is meaning. Future tense: Will mean.
what does compute mean? Maybe if you paid attention in school youd know C:
Samuel Youd died on 2012-02-03.
Samuel Youd was born on 1922-04-16.
it means that you adore her so much youd do anything for her and youd do anything to keep it that way for example: money is my idol i cant live without it, id do anything for it, and i wont give up without a fight. *that was an example, not real*
no youd die
it means u cant tell ur colers apart at all youd think yellow was black
youd have to be dume then
no. to insert a nail into say... a piece of wood, youd use a hammmer. to insert a screw into a piece of wood, youd a screwdriver, wrench, etc.
something youd never want to do
youd kill it
Youd have no parents
blablabla