Read the passage over and over to yourself. Break down each line and try to get an understand of what it means. When I read over it, I think that it simply means this: Headed back through the mud= went back into the dirty hard times You were drenched= you were covered and had enough Anybody could see it was time to come out of the rain= metephorically this means that everyone saw that it was NOW... to part away from your troubles (the rain). That's what I got from the passage... and I hope it helps. The book is great and even though at times you don't understand things- keep reading. It's an amazing book :]
He's a big three headed dog that guards part of the Underworld.
you say: Your sister. they say: Your brother. you say: Your bald headed mother
No. The proper form of the pronoun is "he", as in the separate sentences. This is clearer when the third-person pronoun is placed first, as it properly should be. Separately : The Pirates are headed for the playoffs. He is headed for the playoffs. Joined : He and the Pirates are headed for the playoffs. * You can normally determine the proper form by reading the sentence aloud. Most speakers learned the proper form through simple repetition, and are only confused by the written form.
through its nose
No, they do not, they have separate brains and therefore each has it's own reflex timing.
his assistant
To the best of my knowledge, and admittedly I ain't no expert, the two headed, imperial eagle is not a skinhead design.......But then anybody is liable to say anything.....TatuBaron
The shovel headed land flatworm uses the thin,flat shovel head, to push its way through loose moist dirt
Once it slipped through the interstice in the fence, the rabbit headed straight for the vegetables.
The double-headed arrows on polarizers and analyzers represent the direction of polarization that they allow to pass through their material. It indicates that light with polarization parallel to the arrow direction can pass through, while light with perpendicular polarization is blocked.
The national bird of Puerto Rico is the Puerto Rican spindalis, which is found in large numbers throughout the island and is very important to the island's ecology. It used to be considered a subspecies of the stripe-headed tanager, but it was recently found to be a separate species.
The Yayoi clans were headed by religious elders