No, a semicolon is not used at the end of a sentence; it is typically used to connect two independent clauses that are closely related.
Put a comma after Lastly. You are beginning your sentence with an adverb, however, your adverb is not modifying any other word. Therefore, it must be set off from what follows. Lastly should be preceded by a period or semicolon to show it begins a sentence.
Apostrophe (')Brackets ([ ], ( ), { }, < >)Colon (:)Comma (,)Dashes (-)Ellipsis (...)Exclamation Mark (!)Guillemets (« »)Hyphen (-)Period (.)Question Mark (?)Quotation Marks (" ", ' ')Semicolon (;)Slash (/)Solidus (⁄)
Possessive pronouns show ownership or possession of a noun in a sentence. They replace a noun and indicate who or what it belongs to. Examples include "my," "your," "his," "her," "its," "our," and "their."
Prepositions show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. They indicate location, direction, time, or relationships in space and time. Examples include "in," "on," "at," "from," and "to."
No, a semicolon is not used at the end of a sentence; it is typically used to connect two independent clauses that are closely related.
Put a comma after Lastly. You are beginning your sentence with an adverb, however, your adverb is not modifying any other word. Therefore, it must be set off from what follows. Lastly should be preceded by a period or semicolon to show it begins a sentence.
Where are you going? Where is the subject in this sentence?
An example sentence is a sentence written to show usage of a particular word or phrase. This sentence is an example of an example sentence!
If the question is to give examples of biological in a sentence. " ...This is Biological evidence." or " Biological studies show that... "
You can say abyss of anguish or something
my freind lives in a mansion
Who is the president. Who will drive me to work today.
Possessive pronouns show ownership or possession of a noun in a sentence. They replace a noun and indicate who or what it belongs to. Examples include "my," "your," "his," "her," "its," "our," and "their."
The colon indicates that more information is to come. For example: 'She packed a small case with what she needed for her visit: toiletries, a nightdress, a change of clothing, and a book.' The colon introduces the details of what she packed. Notice too that I used a colon after the words 'For example', to show that specific information would follow. A comma and a semi-colon both indicate that the sentence is not yet finished. However, neither of them indicates that more information (in the sense of a list, an explanation, or further details) is to come, in the way that a colon does.
A colon is used to bring your attention to whatever follows. A semicolon is a pause before an independent clause.A colon (:) is frequently used to introduce a list or an example. So, you could say something like "These are the fruits that I can think of off the top of my head: apple, banana, pear, orange, guava, watermelon."A semicolon (;) divides two independent clauses... another way to think of an independent clause is a complete thought... something that could stand on its own. You use the semicolon to combine those two thoughts/sentences/clauses to show that there is a closer connection. "Bob was sad. His dog died." becomes "Bob was sad; his dog died."[There are other ways to connect two independent clauses... by subordinating one of them with a word like "that" or "because" or by using a comma and a coordinating conjunction: "Bob was sad, and his dog died." Each way can give the user a different message or change the meaning.]
Cinematech - 2002 Colon The Show 1-66 was released on: USA: 2 January 2003