jogged, frolicked, sprinted, moved in a manner that is faster than walking, yet lacking sprinting ability. killing fast
see link below ran, walked, galloped, cantered, drove, skipped, scatted
It is written as two words if used as a noun: "he entered the house through the back door." It is written as one if used as an adjective: "the basketball team ran a backdoor play that produced an easy layup."
wandered ran sprinted dashed dart raced strolled strode twirled stumbled hopped sleepwalked zoomed scooted
Bolted Sped Hurried Galloped Frolicked Trotted Scurried Darted Sorry, that's all I can think of
- What does Ran# mean in maths? Ran# is a scientific way of describing a number with "3 digits before the point" (Thousandths) Below are some examples of Ran#: 0.835, 0.196, 0.166, 0.764
walked. jogged. sprinted. hurried.
Strolled,Jogged,Waddled,Ran,Raced.
There are sailed, drove, rode, ran, walked, jogged, flew, rushed, stormed and climbed.
No. Bob ran like the wind is not a metaphor ,it is a simile because you used the words like the
trotted skipped sailed flipped drove and ran
ran lol
Stan, can, ban, tan, fan, ran, Dan, man, overranword that rhyme with beganman can tan overan Stan ban ran fan dan
Both could be used in different situations: The horse ran fastest of all the horses in the race. The horse ran faster than all of the other horses. When the man, the horse and the dog ran, the horse ran fastest. The horse ran faster than the man and the dog.
Those letters can be arranged to spell words like crop, cop, and ran. Other words made from these letters include rap, par, nap, con, and fan.
"Ran" is not a basic verb; instead, it is the past tense of "run". The past participle of "run" is "run", somewhat confusingly.
Ruth Wakefield invented Chocolate Chip Cookies in 1924. Rumour has it she ran out of currants to put in the cookies and used chocolate instead. She tried to make chocolate cookies, but instead they came out in "CHIP" form. The chocolate chip cookies were named "toll house cookies" after an inn that she and her husband ran in the 1930's.
No, it's not grammatically correct. Try this: She wished she had ran instead of marrying him.