Greg once lived out there in the desert.
I would have written....In Canada he went to the cinema once a week.
The scarce resources of the Great Basin led the Native American tribes who lived there to become nomadic and wander from place to place.
A nomadic Berber of the Sahara was a member of the Tuareg people, known for their nomadic lifestyle in the desert regions of North Africa, including the Sahara. They traditionally lived as semi-nomadic herders, traders, and warriors, moving across vast stretches of desert in search of water and pasture for their livestock.
The name for an extinct prehistoric reptilian is spelled dinosaur.
It would be the house of the Secretaries of State.
Greg once lived out there in the desert.
It is basically wrong, because ever after is an inseparable phrase if it is to keep its meaning. If, however, ever is to modify the adverb happily, then the sentence could be corrected by making after into afterward(s) or a synonymous construction. Thus:They lived ever happily afterward(s) and They lived ever happily (from then) on are some grammatically correct (albeit awkward) alternatives. Of course, these do not have the same meaning as the famous sentence They lived happily ever after.
yes they lived in sand homes in the desert.
I would have written....In Canada he went to the cinema once a week.
That they lived on a desert in africa by leyla
Most commonly, Egyptians lived in the desert in Egypt.
Incas lived in Atacama desert.
no. so and so lived in where ever new york. (period) They moved last year. no. so and so lived in where ever new york. (period) They moved last year.
No, the Miwoks lived in northern California, not in the desert.
He lived in the desert.
Green desert
Essenes