To get to the end of the block.
Yes you can. As I drove down the street, a dog ran in front of the car! I arrived just as they were finishing the ceremony.
The man looked down the street, saw his dog, which he knew shouldn't be in the street, and he ran.
A verb can show action, or it can show state of being. "To run" shows action. "Is" shows state of being. He ran down the street ("ran" is an action verb). She is very smart ("is" shows state of being, or describes her).
He ran away as he could not sit there any longer. The child ran away when his mother asked him to sit down.
The main purpose of a verb in a sentence is to express an action, occurrence, or state of being. It is essential for conveying the relationship between the subject and the predicate in a sentence. Verbs also indicate tense, aspect, and mood in the sentence.
Down the street I ran. Down the street lives my very precious sweetheart.
It means the dog ran in the past
Dog should have a capital D Dog ran down the street -- this is correct if 'Dog' is somebody's name or some animals name. If 'Dog' is not a name then you should have 'the' before dog. The dog ran down the street
Archimedes Of Syracuse.
Bob and street are the nouns in this sentence. Bob is a proper noun, a name.
He stared in astonishment as the streaker ran down the street.
Archimedes
The wheels somersaulted as the bike ran down the street.The bike's tires screamed as it came to an immediate and sudden halt.. If you need more let me know!
god knows which inventor
The boy hollered "dong!", and ran down the street.
Bob
He was walking down the street when he was spotted and he ran, but they caught him.