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, you can end a sentence with the word "this." For example, "I can't believe how amazing this is."
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.
No, the word after the end of a quotation is not capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a new sentence.
Serious answer: Wait as the car draws near. Non-serious answer: This sentence will end with the word 'near'!
No. When you end a sentence that way you don't have a proper end. At "what" or "where" is left out. Your "at" needs a direct object.
no it doesn't because it is a punctuation not a word
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.
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.".
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.
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.
No.
No, the word after the end of a quotation is not capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a new sentence.
Yes.
No!?.
Anaphora-----------PalindromeMadam I'm Adam
Serious answer: Wait as the car draws near. Non-serious answer: This sentence will end with the word 'near'!
No, it's a noun. Incidentally, "end of the week" is not a sentence, it is a phrase.