Business at the cafe flourished.
My plants seemed to flourish when I started playing classical music for them.
My plants seemed to flourish when I started playing classical music for them.
A voluminous amount of denizens signed the Declaration of Independence.
My plants seemed to flourish when I started playing classical music for them.
Flourish means to grow or develop with vigor; to thrive. Sentence: Your vegetable garden is flourishing.
He brandished his sword and swung it about.
i hate that word, likewise, i use it in this sentence
Yes, but not always. "Flourish" is an intransitive verb describing a very high quantity of success as in the sentence: "Due to the rains, the grass flourished." "Flourish" can also be a noun describing a calligraphic or tonal mark as in the sentence: "She would write all of her 'q's with a small flourish on the end."
You just did, or you could just use the sentence "I don't know how to use overtaken in a sentence."
You used presiding in a sentence when you asked about it. And u can use any word in a sentence.
no
The first way you could use cursed in a sentence is "he was forever cursed to a life of pain". If you wish to use it as a swearing type curse a sentence you could use is " he cursed loudly at John"