"Life's a garden, dig it" is a quote from the movie "Joe Dirt." It means that life is like a garden that needs attention and care. In order to reap the rewards and experience growth, one must be willing to put in the effort and work.
base verb = dig. Dig the garden before I get back!past = dug. I dug the garden as quick as I could.past participle = I have dug the garden.
common garden slug dig more then one feet
i dig up all my weeds from my garden
I dig my garden i dig, dig, dig i did my garden i dig it deep i plant my seeds and watch them grow, then a rabbit comes along and, oh, no he eats my (chosen vegetable) munch, munch, munch He eats my ("), he eats the whole bunch i run to the garden and say shu, shu, shu but the rabbit comes back, what shall i do?
i dig you
yes they do eat cereal and they eat lot of things likr lifes
The past tense of "dig" is "dug." For example, "Yesterday, I dug a hole in the garden."
The past tense of dig is dug. My dog dug up my garden just yesterday.
All your plants die and you have to dig them up All your plants die and you have to dig them up
you cant dig a hole you just put the seed in the muddy bits
Cats may dig in the garden to bury their waste, mark their territory, or hunt for prey like insects or rodents. It is a natural behavior for cats to dig, as it is part of their instinctual behavior.
The dimensions of the garden are irrelevant to the solution In 1 hour the father can dig 1/3 of the garden, and the son can dig 1/4 of the garden Together in 1 hour they can dig 1/3 + 1/4 = 4/12 + 3/12 = 7/12 of the garden The whole garden will take 1 ÷ 7/12 hours = 12/7 hours = 1 5/7 hours = 1 hr 42 6/7 mins They will take slightly less than 1¾ hours to dig the garden together.