Want this question answered?
a comma is used when the writer would like to indicate a pause in the conversation. This pause can be the result of a breath, the result of a thought, or the result of waiting for the person to catch on. Other uses of the comma include, "right before quotation marks", when separating varriables (as in a list), or when leading to a new clause in the sentence that is directly dependant on the first clause.
1, 1 cat catches 1 rat in 1 minute...... SO, one cat will catch 100 rats in 100 minutes, assuming no feline fatigue element, and assuming the rats do not become more experienced in evasion, at the given rate of one rat per minute per cat.
food.
Chris Will Have To Fish For 8 Hours... I Think... Yes, it's 8 hours. That was easy.
2 Catch 2 - 1979 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG
Play catch with it
yes
Catch it in a lake
Yes
With a net.
You shouldn't catch a turtle for a pet, you should buy one bred in captivity. It's better for the turtle.
Go to a pond or lake
No
in Pokemon jungle next to the turtle up the but
They are endangered because of accidental by-catch, water pollution, turtle consumption, and more.
first you get a big butterfly net and chase the turtle. get close enough and slam the net over the turtle. then scoop him up and slowly release him into a big box!!
No. "It (a bear) waits to catch salmon' would be unusually literary. "It (a bear) is or was waiting to catch salmon" would be sensible.