Content words are words that give a sentence its meaning. Examples of content words include nouns, adjectives and verbs.
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Content: Happiness or satisfaction I was content at the fact that we were going to Disneyland tomorrow. He was content because of the good grade on his report. ♥☺☻☺♥ Luv ya!
You didn't say which meaning of the word you want to use. Here are some sentences with different meanings.She is content to stay in the country.The content of that book is a little racy for you.See if you can make the puppy content in his new home.
No, the word 'contended' is the past tense for the verb 'contend', to strive in opposition, to struggle, to compete. The correct verb for the context of your sentence is 'content', to be satisfied, to appease desires, to limit requirements. The correct sentence would be:You should be content with what you have.
how can you use the word content in noun and verb in a sentence
The subject and predicate carry most of the content of a sentence.
The content in this book is great.
suffice
content
Depends on the sentence content
Yes, you can use doctor in a sentence, it just depends on the sentence content
"You could say that I am quite content, and very happy where I am."
"Car emotion" is not a sentence at all. It is not even a sentence fragment. It has no intelligible content.
Content words are words that give a sentence its meaning. Examples of content words include nouns, adjectives and verbs.
Yes. That is a correct sentence, or at least a correctly formed sentence*. But there is no content that can be judged as right or wrong. (*It is an interrogative sentence, one that asks a question.)
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