My friend and I sat in the large bleacher seating at the football game. You used it in a sentence when you asked it.
Yes, the noun bleacher is a common noun, a word for any bleachers anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Michael Bleacher, Professor, Colorado Christian University, Lakewood, COBleacher House Road, Martinez, CAThe Bleacher Bar, Boston, MA"Bleacher Boys", 2009 feature documentary"Bleachers", a novel by John Grisham
Don't sit on a bleacher.
Bleacher Report was created in 2008.
Preacher, creature, leacher, leecher, bleacher, screecher and feature.
No, the bleacher seats do not have backs. Only the seats in the grandstand have backs. Bleacher seating by its very definition means no backs.
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
The word "origin" is derived from the French word "origin" and the Latin word "originem," both of which mean, beginning, descent, birth, and rise.
where was the word colonel origin
No
blea Cher
Bleacher Bums - 1979 TV was released on: USA: 15 May 1979