because they want to
Yes, "grunt" is considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of a short, low, guttural noise made by a person or animal. It represents the actual sound it describes.
In Caddo language, you would say "hemenee."
Judging by the loud grunting from the sty, the pigs wanted feeding.
Yes, "huff" can be considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound of someone exhaling loudly or forcefully.
Grunted is typically not used as an adjective; it is the past tense of the verb grunt. However, it could be used in a descriptive way, such as "he let out a grunted response," where it is still functioning as a past tense verb.
No, they store it in the stem. In other words, the part you eat. In dumb people words, the crunchy part. In caveman, Grunt Grunt gruntgrunt GRUNT! or was it grunt grunt GruntGrunt GRUNT!
Its impossible, this cannot happen. No one can be a grunt.
a sentence with the word grunt is.....She grunt me!
a grunt.
grunt is the correct spelling
No but you can be a grunt in halo1
a muffin thats a grunt
Not all elderly people grunt or make repetitive sounds. However, the ones that do likely suffer from an illness, disease, or disorder of some kind. Some grunt and groan out of exhaustion because their body has aged and tires quickly, and some grunt in pain from arthritis or other more serious complications.
the grunt birthday party skull makesit when you get a headshot on a grunt the grunt yells "yay" and explodes with confetti
i dont think sobut people have glitched it on the computer version
you cant play as a grunt
The past tense of grunt is grunted.