as i was sayini befor he said that now.
Let me begin by saying that I'm a pathological liar : P
Begin the sentence with Likewise, or Similarly,
Before I do that, you should give me one good reason why.
Let the dog out before he poops on the floor.
a.Where do the sentences begin and end?c.What is the character saying?b.What words or phrases are unclear?d.Who or what is the subject of the sentence?
That sentence made no sense. But the answer is Authorized.
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence.
Yes, you can begin a sentence with the acronym "NASA."
I don't know if you're asking if quotation marks should be used to begin a sentence or if you're asking if a sentence should be started with a quote from an outside source. So I will answer both. Quotation marks may begin a sentence at any time necessary. While writing essays, in my experience, professors like a little introduction before a quote. But there's no rule saying you can't. Maybe in the sentence before the quote you write an explanation then end the sentence and start the next with a quote. But you could most times use a colon instead of ending the sentence and then the quote would still be within the first sentence.
You can use feeling in a sentence by saying spectacular instead of saying good.
Yes, you certainly can. The word it does not always represent a noun in English. In expressions like it is raining, it is cool outside, and it was a pleasure, the word it is a so-called placeholder pronoun because it has no definite antecedent.
The word 'is' can begin a sentence but not be a question when it is the subject of the question. Example sentence - Is can be the subject in a sentence. But only in sentences of that type (above) or, 'Is' is a two letter word. Otherwise is cannot begin a sentence.