they get sentenced
Rulers, lovers, greatness, power
This poem is written by "Anonymous" in this poem she says that we have to be careful about what we have to speak because it can either break a heart or heal it ,so always choose your words before speaking.
When you don't have any operating system, the computer won't boot. You can only access BIOS setup or your boot-loader. In simple words, you can't do anything with it.
This is a line from Macbeth, Act 4, Scene 3, I believe, that Malcom says to Macduff after Macduff is informed by Ross of the death of his family and it simply means that you shouldn't bottle things up because they are going grow as a burden and break you. Sharing might help. The grief that does not speak -the grief that is not shared and expressed in words Whispers the o'er-fraught heart- toys with the deeply troubled heart And bids it break- and breaks it
Here are ten words:PlaywrightPoetEnglishElizabethanBaldActorRuralMarriedWordsmithFamous
The answer for the question is "THEY GET SENTENCED!"
misbehave misinform misappropriate
Words with the same prefix as mismatch:miscalculatemisconstruemiscountmiscuemisdiagnosemisfortunemisjudgemisleadmismanagemisplacemispronouncemisreadmisrepresentmisstatemisstepmistreat
Pharaoh is a term specific to the Egyptian rulers. There are other words to describe rulers, such as:emperorkingmonarchmajestycaliph
Words that can be made from the letters in "break" are:aarearkbakebakerbarbarebarkbebeakbearbrabraebrakeearerarake
the spelling words are rewrite, reappear, recall, recover, rebuild, dishonest, disagree, disappear, disappoint, disconnect disapprove misbehave, misfortune, misunderstood, misspell, misuse, illegal, and illegible.
Words that can be made from the letters "fall break" are:aableablerafaraleallareareaarkbaabakebakerbalebalerbalkballbarbarebarkbebeakbearbefallbellblarebleakbrabrakebreakearearlelfelkerafablefakefakerfallfarfarefearfellferalflabflakflakeflarefleafreakkalekraallalablabellakelarklealeafleakrakereal
You break words into syllables. Take the word impossible, for instance: im.pos.si.ble
first of all, mis- is not a suffix..it is a prefix Prefixes come before words and suffixes come after words. You can pretty much add this prefix to many words... EX: misunderstood, misinterpret, misleading, mistake, misspell, misbehave, mistreat, misquote, misfortune, misplace, misstep.
The homograph of "break" is "break." Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings.
Rulers, lovers, greatness, power
There are 150 words in springbreak