How long are you going to wait for an answer? Until 8pm? Until midnight? Until next Tuesday? No, "Until." is not a sentence.
No, 'until' is a subordinate conjunction, or a preposition.
A word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is a portion of a sentence which can consist of one or more words. "Am" is a verb. It is possible that when "am" is used in a sentence that "am" will be the predicate of the sentence, for example: "Are you the chosen one? I am."
'Is until tomorrow' is a fragment, because it has no real subject. You can make it a sentence: What Is until tomorrow?
"Around the next bend" by itself is a prepositional phrase. It cannot be a sentence by itself because it has no subject. In a conversation, a subject may be implied, but that does not make it a sentence.
The stunt driver
A sentence is too general when you use too many pronouns. Tis only applies if it is out of context, though. For example: He knew she was thinking about it. If you hear this sentence by itself, you don't know who he is, who she is, or what it is. If this was in a paragraph, It may be obvious what these things are, but by itself the sentence is very vague.
yes, but it depends on how it is used in a sentence on what it means.
Jenny was the best player on the team until Jackie came.
Example sentence - Her husband was domineering and demanding until he saw how it effected his family.
The word itself is intensive. An intensive pronoun is used to emphasize a preceding noun or pronoun, while a reflexive pronoun is used when the subject and object of a sentence are the same. "Itself" does not refer back to the subject of the sentence, but rather intensifies or emphasizes the noun or pronoun it is attached to.
I used to pick on my sister until she beat me up.
Ouch! Its so painful! (it has to be as speech, can only really be used by itself because it is used as an exclamation)
A word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is a portion of a sentence which can consist of one or more words. "Am" is a verb. It is possible that when "am" is used in a sentence that "am" will be the predicate of the sentence, for example: "Are you the chosen one? I am."
The answer is in the question. A pronoun is used to stand for a noun in a sentence, although it may also have an antecedent that is a pronoun itself.
No, a sentence cannot end with itself because that would create an endless loop. A sentence needs to have a clear conclusion to convey meaning effectively.
Yes, it is- you can use that as a sentence by itself. "I" is the subject, "am" is the verb, and "done" is the past participle of the verb "do", used in this sentence as a predicate adjective modifying "I".
There are many examples for this such as this sentence itself.
your question is itself a sentence