Yes, you can.
Example: The man was beating the clay to soften it which was the reason why the cat scared the nearby dog.
Yes, you can. Example sentence:Maggie and I went on a trip to Italy and France, and then we traveled to Greece.
Though starting a sentence with And was once frowned up on, it has become accepted due to common usage.
It became APPARENT that the man was friendly once we had got to know him. (in ENGLISH) It soon became clear that the man was friendly once we had got to know him.
It means "one more time" or "once more."
Certainly. Once I ate an apple.
A sentence an offender received if he has been convicted of two or more crime's but his prison sentence is considered complete once the longest single term has been served is a concurrent sentence. It is a less severe penalty than consecutive sentencing.
Yes, you can. Example sentence:Maggie and I went on a trip to Italy and France, and then we traveled to Greece.
Strengths.
You can't make a real English sentence using only each of the 26 letters of the alphabet once. However, you can make a nonsense sentence that is pronounceable:Squdgy fez blank jimp vox crwth.Squdgy fewz blanck jimpth vorx.
Though starting a sentence with And was once frowned up on, it has become accepted due to common usage.
There are certainly too many words in the English lexicon to only use each of them but once.
Idont know
No. The more natural phrasing is "It will never be like it once was."
Of course. In a sentence, you can still use more than one "y."
Idont know
A quick brown fox easily jumps over the lazy dog.
It became APPARENT that the man was friendly once we had got to know him. (in ENGLISH) It soon became clear that the man was friendly once we had got to know him.