Yes, they can.
No, sentence fragments and phrases are not the same. A phrase is a group of related words that does not contain a subject and a verb, while a sentence fragment is a group of words that appears to be a sentence but is missing a subject, a verb, or both. In other words, a phrase is a fragment whereas a sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence.
Words that belong to the same part of speech have similar grammatical properties and functions within a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the dog," both "cat" and "dog" are nouns, while in the sentence "She quickly ran home," both "quickly" and "ran" are verbs.
Yes, the sentence "I am just only kidding" is redundant because "just" and "only" have similar meanings when used in this context. The sentence could be made more concise by saying "I am just kidding."
No, it is not grammatically correct to use both an exclamation mark and a question mark at the end of the same sentence. Choose one or the other based on the intended tone of the sentence.
No, sentences typically include a subject and a verb, while a phrase does not necessarily have both. Phrases can be part of a sentence or standalone, while a sentence is a complete thought expressing a complete idea.
Yes both words have same meaning!
No.
Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana. Parallel structure is when the sentence is basically the same with different words. The structure of the sentence is the same in both cases. The words of the sentence may be different in both cases.
they both relate to science
No, sentence fragments and phrases are not the same. A phrase is a group of related words that does not contain a subject and a verb, while a sentence fragment is a group of words that appears to be a sentence but is missing a subject, a verb, or both. In other words, a phrase is a fragment whereas a sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence.
My hand is in warm water.
The baby is cared in the uterus and it descents by the vagina during birth.
You use it to express both egotistical and fantastic at the same time
0+0 = 0
Yes, the sentence "I am just only kidding" is redundant because "just" and "only" have similar meanings when used in this context. The sentence could be made more concise by saying "I am just kidding."
We have already prepared the food so dinner is all ready to eat. I just used already and all ready in the same sentence. Already and all ready are both used in this sentence. This sentence includes the homonyms all ready and already.
Yes, in a way: In the sentence "I saw him do it" the pronoun "him" is both the direct object of the verb "saw" and the subject of the infinitive verb "do."