fran's avatar
fran

July 7, 2020

0
hunger

despite eat the cheese I hunger an apple.

Corrections

dDespite having eaten the cheese, I am hungery for an apple.

Or maybe: "Even though I ate some cheese, I still feel like an apple."

dDespite eat theing cheese, I hunger for an apple.

Feedback

"hunger for" is a little intense. You can also simply say "I want an apple" ^^

L6's avatar
L6

July 7, 2020

0

dDespite eat theing cheese, I hunger for an apple.

'Hunger for' isn't common usage in this context. It's more often used to mean a strong desire for figurative things instead of actual food.

hunger

despite eat thhaving eaten some cheese, I hungeram craving an apple.

"the cheese" could be used if the reader knows what 'cheese' you're talking about. (for example, they bought it for you to eat: "ah, it's that cheese, THE cheese")
"i hunger" is technically acceptable but considered old fashioned. You might hear it in historical or fantasy dramas (for example, a vampire would hunger for blood).

hunger


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

despite eat the cheese I hunger an apple.


despite eat thhaving eaten some cheese, I hungeram craving an apple.

"the cheese" could be used if the reader knows what 'cheese' you're talking about. (for example, they bought it for you to eat: "ah, it's that cheese, THE cheese") "i hunger" is technically acceptable but considered old fashioned. You might hear it in historical or fantasy dramas (for example, a vampire would hunger for blood).

dDespite eat theing cheese, I hunger for an apple.

dDespite having eaten the cheese, I am hungery for an apple.

Or maybe: "Even though I ate some cheese, I still feel like an apple."

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium