Tide tables can be found in an almanac.
The position of the sun above the earth at any time can be found in a nautical almanac.
"You can check out that almanac for 7 days then you must return it." "In the days before technology, farmers would consult an almanac to determine what weather might be coming."
I wish I could, but I don't think I could do it.Not a sentence expressing doubt, silly, a sentence with the word doubt in it:The writer of the first sentence has doubt in his ability to write the sentence requested.
your question could count as one
A sentence using the word admit could be this, "The man on trial did not want to admit he was wrong."
The new Gardner's Almanac has just been published.
The position of the sun above the earth at any time can be found in a nautical almanac.
"You can check out that almanac for 7 days then you must return it." "In the days before technology, farmers would consult an almanac to determine what weather might be coming."
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
Yes, the word "almanac" is a common noun. It refers to a publication that includes information like calendars, weather forecasts, and astronomical data.
An anonymous internet user gave some advice to a fellow user who was in need of it.
No, "fact" is the answer for "Almanac entry" in crossword puzzles.
The word "almanac" is pronounced as AL-muh-nak.
You could write the sentence with the word torrent like this: I don't know how to use the word torrent in a sentence.
A sentence with the word 'grudgingly' in it could be 'i grudgingly shared my sweets with my brother'
Almanac.
annual manual