answersLogoWhite

0

sloppy

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Is the word hurriedly considered an adverb?

Yes. Hurriedly is an adverb. It means done in a hurry, with haste.


Can the opposite of applaud be blurt?

To applaud means to recognize that someone has done something great - it's usually done by clapping hands. To blurt means to say something hurriedly without thinking about it. They're not opposites, no.


Would the word hurriedly be a verb?

No, the word hurriedly is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Example:We hurriedly dressed so we wouldn't miss the bus.Mom hid the gifts hurriedly when she heard the kids stirring.


What does clumsily mean?

done without care or often hurriedly or awkwardly -pierre


When was My Rhyme Ain't Done created?

My Rhyme Ain't Done was created in 1987.


What does the idiom to have no rhyme or reason mean?

The meaning of the idiomatic expression, without rhyme and reason, means that someone is said or done without a purpose. Meaning that there is logical explanation for or understandable reason for the way something is done.


Does done rhyme with on?

No - it is pronounced "dun"


Does done and home rhyme?

No, done does not rhyme with come.


I am what you are done to at school and i rhyme with naught?

taught


Does sum rhymes with done?

Technically, yes! It is called a sound-rhyme. The spelling doesn't rhyme, but the sound does. It is acceptable in poetry with rhyme scheme.


What is forced rhyme?

A forced rhyme is usually when something doesn't quite rhyme, but the poem "forces" it anyway... (I ate an orange / and then duck a l'orange) depending on your pronunciation or being a little free with accents or pressing a word beyond its normal capacities. It can also happen if you have to make up a word in order to fit the rhyme. This can be done playfully or artfully (as Seuss), but it can also be done badly or pointlessly ("I ate an orange" / declared Mr. Zorange). -------------------------------------- A forced rhyme is also where the writer grammatically changes a phrase to make the rhyme fit... The barber gave me a buzz Fine with it I was ...normally, you'd say "I was fine with it".


You have never done heroin but you are testing positive how can this be?

It could be from poppy seeds in certain breads, like the poppy seed buns on fast food sandwiches and burgers.