Santa Clause is really jolly but was not so jolly when he saw his naughty list.
You can use "jolly" as an adjective to describe someone who is lively and cheerful, for example: "She had a jolly demeanor that brightened everyone's mood."
You can use "tis" in a sentence as a contraction of "it is" or "it has." For example, "Tis the season to be jolly" or "Tis been a long day."
The children were full of jolly laughter as they opened their presents on Christmas morning.
The preposition in the sentence is "like".
The jolly jackrabbit jumped to the junk yard full of jello.
I invited my chum to go fishing with me this weekend.
You can use "tis" in a sentence as a contraction of "it is" or "it has." For example, "Tis the season to be jolly" or "Tis been a long day."
You can use it instead of using the word pub. Example, "Bob walked into the jolly tavern."
This cup of tea is jolly divine.It was divine intervention.She looks pleasantly divine today.
The children were full of jolly laughter as they opened their presents on Christmas morning.
Yes, you can, because synonyms can be used for their specific connotations. Besides that, glad and jolly are not even actual synonyms: one expresses an emotion while the other describes a personality.Example: "I was glad to see that my friend had maintained his jolly demeanor."(I was happy to see that my friend had maintained his cheerful disposition.)
No, it is not an adverb. The word jolly is an adjective. The rarely used adverb form is "jollily." (writers use "in a jolly manner")
The preposition in the sentence is "like".
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The jolly Rodger.
The jolly jackrabbit jumped to the junk yard full of jello.
as jolly as ME
JOLLY XD you just have to shake your hair crazily to be jolly! JOLLY XD