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this is a paragraph. then when you press enter it becomes a new one!
article 4
This is found in the main body of the Constitution. Article II, section 1, paragraph 6. What is not quite clear is whether to VP actually becomes president or merely acts a President.
Article V
Article V
There are usually about 5-9 sentences in a paragraph although if you make your point in about 4 sentences, that is considered a paragraph. Usually you can't just do a two sentence paragraph. If the point you are trying to make is unfinished, it is NOT a pargraph even if it is 9 sentences long. Do you get what I am saying (don't answer to this question)?Hope this helps
A sentence fragment has no object; either no subject or no verb. As has been pointed out on The Simpsons, "Sentence Fragment" is, itself, a sentence fragment. For example, "The fox, the dog." Doesn't have a verb - it doesn't stand up as a sentence. "The fox jumps the dog." Becomes a sentence with the addition of the verb. Another example, "Looking into the distance, saw the house." Is a sentence fragment as it has no subject, adding a subject makes the sentence: "Looking into the distance, he saw the house."
Editor is a noun. If it's used in the predicate of a sentence with a linking verb, then it's a predicate nominative. Ex: John is a good editor. Notice that editor is the subject of the first sentence of this paragraph. Non-example: John hired an editor. Editor is in the predicate, but hired is not a linking verb, so it becomes the direct object.
When a comma is inserted into the middle of a sentence it becomes a compound sentence.
it becomes very interesting
A story that incorporates a mix of simple, compound, and complex sentences will have a more engaging and dynamic flow. By varying sentence length and structure, the writing becomes more interesting and keeps the reader's attention. Transition words and phrases can also help connect different sentence structures smoothly.
According to the wikimedia article this becomes the spice known as mace.