I have some cookies in my lunch box and you may have one.
No, if you end a sentence with the word of, it would be an incomplete sentence. There will always be other words or at least one word that follows the word of in a sentence.
Depends on the sentence. One example: " Can you hold this?" "Do you understand this?" "I don't know what a chysnthymum is, do you know this?"
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.
one day the word there got a girlfriend named their. THE END
noA sentence cannot end with the word "the". Hmmm, wait a minute.
The word "incidentally" can be used at the end of a sentence. You can make the sentence "This was done incidentally.".
no it doesn't because it is a punctuation not a word
What for? There is no point."One could wonder what that information was needed for."
What for? There is no point."One could wonder what that information was needed for."
Only in one context, which is seen in the question: you used "the" as a noun exemplar of "the word" and the object of analysis, and not as a grammatical component of the sentence. When used as an article, "the" cannot appear at the end of a sentence.
No.
It may be. There is no word in English that cannot begin or end a sentence. The idea that certain word are unfit to end a sentence comes from Latin grammar, not English.