the dog gnawed away at the bone
Gnaw is a verb, but gnawed is a verb past tense. There are a few ways you can say it in a sentence below. The dog gnawed at her bone. He gnawed at the meat, forgetting his manners.
Example sentence - He loved his little calico kitten.
Example sentence - The little piglets squealed when we tried to hold them.
The squirrel ran along the telephone wire.
Horses and oxen have been domesticated to work on farms.
When my dog was a puppy, he had gnawed on my dad.
The rat gnawed at the rope for some time before it had split a part.
Gnaw is a verb, but gnawed is a verb past tense. There are a few ways you can say it in a sentence below. The dog gnawed at her bone. He gnawed at the meat, forgetting his manners.
The spaniel gnawed happily on a bone.
There are five phonemes in the word "gnawed": /g/ /n/ /ɔː/ /d/.
The word gnawed is a verb form, or adjective, and would not have a plural.
The 'g' and the 'd' are silent in the word "gnawed". The 'g' is silent at the beginning of the word, and the 'd' is silent at the end.
A non-example of something gnawed would be a pristine pencil. Pencils are often chewed on incessantly as a nervous habit.
Example sentence with the word "advise":"I would advise you not to do that."
This is an example of a sentence using the word breakfast.
The antonym of gnawed is not bitten. Chewed.
This is an example of an exclamatory sentence using the word happening!