The monster roared loudly because it wants to be heard
I say no because he can like whoever he wants and just because you like a baby doesn't mean your a monster!! Your personality makes you a monster or not!!=)
Because first of all, his NAME is COOKIE monster and he likes his cookies.
The black car roared
The cookie monster fears cookies. The cookie monster fears maddy because she is one evil cookie loving monster with 8 legs...
Because his head shape is roughly like that of a triangle. Also Telly monster is a practicing mason.
The ogre roared loudly as it stomped through the forest, its massive form striking fear into all who crossed its path.
The male lion roared loudly to establish his dominance over the pride.
The male lion roared loudly to mark his territory.
The thunder roared loudly as the storm approached.
Loud is an adjective describing the volume of a sound. It really has no verb form. However, the adverb form, loudly, can describe verbs. Some examples: * He sang loudly so he could be heard above the drums. * The fans roared loudly as the Americans scored another goal. * The preacher spoke loudly to inspire the congregation. * Upon hearing of his death, Mom cried loudly.
Yes, for example: He spoke loudly. Spoke is the verb and loudly describes how.
The verb is roared.
Roar is the present tense of roared.
The duration of The Mouse That Roared is 1.38 hours.
Yes it can be used at the end of a sentence, however, its a word which can be at the beginning, middle or end. E.g. Loudly, he ran away. She screamed loudly because she was scared. He heard someone screaming loudly.
Yes, "a strong gust of wind roared" is an example of alliteration because the words "strong" and "gust" both start with the same "g" sound.
The Mouse That Roared was created on 1959-10-26.