Desisted - meaning stopped Detested - meaning hated Deceased - meaning dead.
You need to double the final letter P before adding "ed' at the end: stopped.
No. A proper use of ceased would be, "After they stopped breathing, they ceased to exist." The word you need is seized, which means to take hold of. "They seized the chance."
The spelling of the slang word is carmetologist, a play on the word cosmetologist, and intended to mean a woman who fixes her makeup while driving (and most annoyingly, while stopped overlong at a traffic signal or intersection).
The correct spelling is 'adjourned'.
The likely word is "interrupted" (stopped in progress).
The correct spelling is "stopping" (halting, suspending).
Desisted - meaning stopped Detested - meaning hated Deceased - meaning dead.
As she put the packet of rice into the pot the enemy stopped her from enchanting a spell.
You need to double the final letter P before adding "ed' at the end: stopped.
The word may be: - a transposition of "surprised" (met with unexpected situation) - the word "subsided" (lessened or stopped; fell away from lack of support)
Muzzy Pep's "I Haven't Got Time To Spell It Out"
The future perfect of stop in English is "will have stopped." I will have stopped you will have stopped he/she/it will have stopped we will have stopped you will have stopped they will have stopped
His mother didn't put a spell on him, she unknowingly protected him with her love. This broke on his seventeenth birthday or when he stopped calling the house where her only blood living blood relative lived home.
It was very hard for the United Nations but with the power of wizard magic they casted a mighty spell to make everyone colour blind and that is how racism was stopped.
No. A proper use of ceased would be, "After they stopped breathing, they ceased to exist." The word you need is seized, which means to take hold of. "They seized the chance."
It is possible that you ran out of runes. Another thing to check is whether you are wielding a magic weapons, i.e., a staff or wand. Select the spellbook icon, and myour mouse over the attack spell (or other spell) you want to cast, to check the requirements.