To kneel is to stand on your knees rather than your feet. In most cases this means resting on both knees, but when kneeling as a sign of respect (e.g. to a monarch), one knee touches the ground while the other leg bends. The attitude when pleading for something or when at prayer has both knees on the ground.
The future tense of "kneel" is "will kneel." Example: "Tomorrow, she will kneel to pray."
It means to kneel down and pray.
do you mean like kneel down? Because that's how
of Kneel, of Kneel.
We do kneel at the altar to pray. Anyone can kneel anywhere they want to in our church. It shows humblesness. If you don't kneel here on earth, you will kneel and confess on judgment day.
Actually, the word "slate" does not rhyme with "kneel," as they have different vowel sounds. "Slate" rhymes with words like "great" and "late."
That is the correct spelling of kneel.
The past tense of "kneel" is "knelt" or "kneeled."
kneel to god
The suffixes for "kneel" are "kneeled" and "kneeling."
You use the future tense of the word "kneel" by adding the auxiliary verb "will" or "shall" before the base form of the verb. For example, "I will kneel before the king."
I / you / we / they kneel. He / she /it kneels