you could miss 3
Bit of a vague question, but anyway."Miss" could be a unmarried female,"miss" could be "not to hit", like in a miss is as good as a mile"mis" could be the Afrikaans word for dung."mis" could be the Afrikaans word for "miss", like in "I will miss you when you are gone ( Ek sal jou mis as jy weg is)"
It seems like she expressed her feelings by saying she misses him, and he replied by saying he would miss her if he could, suggesting that he is unable to miss her for some reason. This could indicate a barrier preventing him from fully reciprocating her feelings.
If there are 73 questions, then you could potentially miss all 73 of them.
You could be pregnant.
Miss is for someone who is not married. Mrs. is for someone who is married and Ms. is for someone who could or could not be married but your do not know therefore you put miss.
Miss Maudie moved in with Miss Stephanie Crawford after her house burned down. Miss Stephanie kindly offered her place until Miss Maudie's house could be rebuilt.
"aim his" will probably be " a miss", although the "miss" could be a prefix "mis-" or "mys"
It could be months but usually IF SHES GOING TO MISS YOU it will be somewhere around 3-4 months
you could die you could die
If you miss I think 5 UNEXCUSED then you could be brought to court for truancy, but if all attendances are EXCUSED then if you miss 18 days you could also be brought to court for truancy
Well, when he/she is out or away do they call you or write to you or stay in contact at all? If they miss you like you miss them, they would call you and no one could get in the way.