To hew means to cut. A carpenter might begin a piece by rough hewing his piece of wood with an axe or adze. An explorer might hew a path through a jungle.
This is not an English word. Please check your spelling and ask again with the correct word.
So you think that's a difficult question, do you?
Sure, I can help with that! Just provide me with the sentence and the underlined word, and I'll give you a synonym that fits the context.
The teacher asked the class, "can anyone put a homophone in a sentence for me".
Schoolteachers would tell you that it is forbidden to begin a sentence with the word 'and'. This could well be a myth as writers have been using it this way for many years. However, you should be encouraged to form more complex sentences by not allowing the use of a conjunction to start a sentence
even in a crisis, we must hew to this nations principles of liverty, eqality, and justice
The word hew is a verb that means to use an ax or other tool to cut something, especially wood. When the weekend arrives, the Smith family will have a lot of timber to hew.
Example sentence - The contact was not in the correct eye.
My teacher gave me the word inlegible, which I don't know how to use in a correct sentence.
Yes, this is the correct way to use the word soliciting.
tendering a helping hand is this a correct sentence?
The correct word to use in that sentence is advised. Adviced is not defined as a word at all so it should not be used.
I hope you really wanted the word "this" used in a sentence. This is a word that indicates an item or a location. This is the correct package. This is the correct street to turn right.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
As ominous means baleful, forbidding, menacing, minacious, and so on, it is not the correct word to use in the sentence.
The use of the word in the sentence you quote is in the sense of having been perceived as being rude to an elder. So yes, the sentence is correct.
You take the word, and put it in a gramatically correct sentence. :) *HEY NATALIE ;) FROM: BANANA*