spell piece
how do you divide the word pieces into syllables
The word pieces, meaning "many small parts" is a plural noun.
Probly I would spell that word probably. It comes from the word probable . It is pronounced probba-blee.
sections, parts,
cupcake shortcake beefcake pancake
You need to make sure that the sentence you make fits the word pieces. For example: I have 24 pieces of cake. How many pieces do I need to collect? The word pieces is most often used in numbers and more than 2.
The spelling is one word "showpiece" (an excellent example on exhibition).
One of these may be the word : SHELTER - cover, protection SHATTER - to break into pieces
There is no anagram. The letters spell the word pair "pieces too."The scramble was likely miscopied as with L instead of i, and another E instead of O, it would spell telescope.
Crubs has no meaning to it. Meaning it is not a word If you are trying to spell CRUMBS then that is how you spell it. crumbs are tiny pieces of bread or any other solid foods.
The word (from French) is collage (visual art that is made by the assemblage of pieces, images, and forms).The similar word is college (university).
The likely word is pieces (parts, fragments).The astrological sign, symbolized by fish, is Pisces.
Unscrambled, the letters 'musthis' spell the word isthmus.An isthmus is a piece of land that connects two larger pieces of land together.
No. The word "desert" (a dry region) has one S. The word with two S's is "dessert" (the final course of a meal, such as cake or pie).
There are two possibilities : the word "pieces" (parts of a whole) or Pisces (the astrology sign symbolized by a fish).
Not a french word that I know. If you mean a small cake, eaten at breakfast, shaped like a crescent moon, then it is a croissant.
The correct spelling is fruit cake.This is a cake which can contain various fruits, depending on the recipe. Though it commonly has raisins, sultanas and cherries.In some countries such as the UK, the term "fruit cake" is also commonly applied to someone as an idiom to describe them as crazy. For example "john's a bit of a fruit cake isn't he?". In the US they tend to use the term "fruit loop" instead.