tinsel
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The french word "bougie" most often means "candle", but it can also be "spark plug" in a car.
The simple subject in the sentence is "spark."
No, "spark" is not an onomatopoeic word. Onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate the sound they represent, such as "buzz" or "meow." "Spark" is a word that describes a small fiery particle or flash of light, but it does not directly imitate the sound it represents.
You could add the suffix -ing to it to make the word sparking.
The French word is 'estincelle' meaning tinsel
It is a french word, meaning ''spark''
tensil
Oh, dude, you're talking about mistletoe! Yeah, like, the word estincelle totally means spark in old French, and mistletoe was believed to have these magical sparkly powers back in the day. So, like, if you're looking to add some spark to your Christmas decorations, mistletoe is the way to go!
A spark plug incapable of producing sufficient spark to ignite the air/fuel mixture.
It began with the storming of the Bastille.
The action of you pulling the Christmas cracker causes friction which creates a spark that ignites the gunpowder to make a BANG!!!
the declaration of independence. helped spark the french revolution after the example set by the Americans
go to spark notes
Well yesterday i got a razor spark scooter for christmas and well i charged it all night and this morning i got on it and it only lasted for 20 or 30 minutes.
If you have no gap meaning the electrodes are touching then the spark plug is being grounded therefore causing a no spark situation. There has to be a gap in order for the electricity to jump from the electrode to the ground.
The french word "bougie" most often means "candle", but it can also be "spark plug" in a car.