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Vann Eie selfstandige naamwoord knows Werkwoord that Ondergeskikte voegwoord the Bepaler police 👮 Selfstandige naamwoord will Hulp eventually Bywoord tie Werkwoord the Bepaler murders Selfstandige naamwoord to Aanneming him Voornaamwoord .
Eie selfstandige naamwoord
Werkwoord
Ondergeskikte voegwoord
Bepaler
👮
Selfstandige naamwoord
Hulp
Bywoord
Werkwoord
Bepaler
Selfstandige naamwoord
Aanneming
Voornaamwoord
Vann knows that the police will eventually tie the murders to him. Vann knows that the police will eventually tie the murders to him.
Woorde en sinne
Vann
- A surname.
- A male given name
knows
-
- third-person singular simple present indicative of know
- All persons, singular and plural, present form of know.
👮
police
-
- A public agency charged with enforcing laws and maintaining public order, usually being granted special privileges to do so, particularly
- A public agency charged with enforcing laws and maintaining public order, usually being granted special privileges to do so, particularly
- A public agency charged with enforcing laws and maintaining public order, usually being granted special privileges to do so, particularly
- A public agency charged with enforcing laws and maintaining public order, usually being granted special privileges to do so, particularly
- The staff of such a department or agency, particularly its officers; (regional, chiefly US, Caribbean, Jamaica, Scotland, countable) an individual police officer.
- People who try to enforce norms or standards as if granted authority similar to the police.
- (slang) Cleanup of a military facility, as a formal duty.
- Synonym of administration, the regulation of a community or society.
- (obsolete) Alternative form of policy.
- (obsolete) Alternative form of polity, civilization, a regulated community.
will
-
- Used to express the future tense, sometimes with an implication of volition or determination when used in the first person. Compare shall.
- To be able to, to have the capacity to.
- Expressing a present tense or perfect tense with some conditional or subjective weakening: "will turn out to", "must by inference".
- To habitually do (a given action).
- To choose or agree to (do something); used to express intention but without any temporal connotations, often in questions and negation.
- To wish, desire (something).
- To wish or desire (that something happen); to intend (that).
- Implying will go.
eventually
- In the end; at some later time, especially after a long time, a series of problems, struggles, delays or setbacks.
- For some tail; for all terms beyond some term; with only finitely many exceptions.
- Possibly, potentially, perhaps
murders
-
plural of murder
to
-
- A particle used for marking the following verb as an infinitive.
- As above, with the verb implied.
- Used to indicate an obligation on the part of, or a directive given to, the subject.
- In order to.
him
-
- A masculine pronoun; he as a grammatical object.
- A masculine pronoun; he as a grammatical object.
- A masculine pronoun; he as a grammatical object.
- (colloquial) As a grammatical subject or object when joined with a conjunction.
- Used reflexively: (to) himself.
- With nominative effect: he, especially as a predicate after be, or following a preposition.
- (slang) A person of elevated skill at a sport, game, or other activity.