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Showing posts from June, 2016

English : Word : REMORSE

Meaning and use in sentences and the word is REMORSE REMORSE  : (1) a feeling of sadness and being sorry for something you have done.    (2) a strong feeling of guilt and regret about something you have done. SENTENCES : πŸ˜ƒ He felt no remorse for the murders he had committed  πŸ˜ƒ After the argument , she was filled with remorse. πŸ˜ƒJudges took account of the prisoner's remorse. πŸ˜ƒ I'M  still remorseful for having broken it.

English : Word : Chomp

Let's discuss about the meaning of CHOMP and how to use in sentences CHOMP : To chew or bite on noisily, biting and grinding food in your mouth so it becomes soft enough to swallow, to chew or bite on something repeatedly, the act or an instance of vigorous biting. SENTENCES :  πŸ˜ƒ A horse chomping oats. πŸ˜ƒ Chomping on a cigar. πŸ˜ƒ He finished the last of his soundwich with a single CHOMP. πŸ˜ƒ Brad, on the other hand, would rather swirl the soft and soupy than chomp on the substantial. πŸ˜ƒ To chomp cigars with the celebrity governer in the capital. πŸ˜ƒ Many match size carp are reaching  upper double figures and such fish easily chomp down bigger baits like 20 millimetre boilies intended for the real.

English : Woord : HOVER

Let's discuss about the meaning of HOVER and will make some sentences with the word  HOVER - (1) To remain floating, suspended or fluttering in the air ( gulls hovering over the waves) (2) To remain or linger  in or near a place ( hovering around the speaker's podium).(3) To remain in an uncertain state, waver ( hovered between anger and remorse). Sentences: - The souls sensed their keeper and rose from the floor of the deep lake to hover around him like suspended, tiny green lanterns. -The dual moon seemed to hover somewhere in the middle of the air of a massive chasm, just like the dozen or so hulking space ships, whose dark grey skins reflected like skins order of massive grey whales in the moonlight.

English : Word : CACOPHONY

Today we are going to learn about the word CACOPHONY and will make some sentences CACOPHONY - harsh discordance of sound, dissonance ( a cacophony of hoots, cackles and wails)., a discordant and meaningless mixture of sounds, often at loud volume SENTENCES: - Heard a cacophony of horns during the traffic jam. - The cacophony produced by city traffic at midday. - A cacophony of bleats, chomping  and scuffling of hooves drawbar out her words. - Her thoughts were interrupted  by a cacophony of squawks and wings beating against the chicken coop walls. - She raised the amulet to share at it, the cacophony around her rising as the excited inmates glimpsed their freedom.

English : Word : SHRUGGED

SHRUGGED : raise ( one's shoulders) slightly and momentarily to express doubt, ignorance or indifferences, dismiss something as unimportant. SENTENCES : - Jimmy looked enquiringly at Pete, who shrugged his shoulders. - The managing director shrugged off the criticism. - Carmen shrugged again, plunging her hands into the warm dishwater. - Felipa shrugged a shoulder elegantly.

English : Word : FUMBLE

FUMBLE - to feel or grope about clumsily               - to fail to hold a ball after having touched it or carried                 it , as in a baseball or football game.             - to do something clumsily or unsuccessfully, blunder                 or fail. Sentences: - He fumbled in his pocket for the key. - She bit her lip and began to fumble with a small purse. - Then someone else can fumble on the steps. - He began to fumble with the ring of his harness. - Shipton swore and began to fumble with his line to rappel again, down to the now injured and trapped from hovering below him.

English : Word : Gorge

GORGE - a narrow valley between hills or mountains, typically with steep rocky walls and a stream running trough it.    - The throat, the gullet. SENTENCE: - The gory  sight made my gorge rise . - Up the gorge , there were no climbers tacked to the ICY walls. - Parallel to each other for a considerable distance, with the Tenasserim river winding between them till it turns south and flows  through a narrow rocky gorge in the Western most range to the sea.

English : Word : SCOWL

SCOWL - to look as someone or something with a very annoyed expression. Sentences :  - The boy scowled at her and reluctantly followed her back into school. - She was clearly annoyed, as you could tell from the SCOWL on her face. - Here tone was light , but Rita scowled at her. - She clamped her hands on her hips and scowled up at him. - She screwed the cap tight and scowled back at him.

English : Word : RUCK - SACK

RUCK -SACK - a large bag, usually having two straps and a supporting frame, carried on the back and often used by climbers, campers , hikers, bicyclists  Sentences : - a man carrying a brilliant blue rucksack. - Mohan approached the couch, where the large rucksack sat. - She shrugged out of the rucksack and opened the drawers of her dresses, dumping their contents onto the floor. - Tired of puzzling over the world around her, Lana shrugged off the rucksack, pushed jack over and lay down with him.

English : Word : GRUMPY

GRUMPY - bad tempered, testy, touchy, irritable, ill - natured, disagreeable  Sentences : - He'd been in a grumpy mood since he got up. - She headed for the door, tossing a grumpy reply over her shoulder. - A grumpy meow drew her gaze to Xander's cat, who rubbed it's face against her leg. - Dean simply shook  his head, committed to being grumpy for the entire day.

English : Word : Miffed

MIFFED - a petty quarrel                 - perhaps an imitative expression of bad temper.                 - bad - tempered mood                  - to be slightly annoyed, specifically with someone or                     something. Sentences : - She turned around, looking slightly miffed. - I was miffed that I was the sole person burdened with straightening out this mess. - Not only was he miffed at Weller's attitude, but at the short lengthy of his own fuse. - Was he being sarcastic, or was he still miffed about the losing the miles?

English : Word : Clink

CLINK - a sharp ringing sound , such as that made by striking metal or glass. Sentence : - the CLINK of ice in tall glasses. - his ring clinked against the crystal. - I could hear a glass CLINK and there was a pause.

English : Word : Scootch

 Scootch - to move a small amount without standing up (of a person) or lifting from a surface ( of an object). - is to move over a very small distance. Sentences : - Scootch your seat over here. - Scootch over close. - We'll just Scootch them over. - he scooched down and rubber the dog's  head. - waiters kept pressing against the table trying to scooch by.

English : Word : Twilight

TWILIGHT - The soft glowing light from the sky when the sun is below the horizon, caused by the reflection of the sun's rays from the atmosphere. Synonyms : half- light, semi- darkness, dimness, gloom Sentence:  - The sense of being in the TWILIGHT zone returned. - In the TWILIGHT and the night the rabbits came regularly and made a hearty meal. - They were sitting in the TWILIGHT by a window in the drawing room.