The king held a jousting tournament to find a worthy knight to protect the princess.
Lancelot, did you win the tournament?
There is going to be a tournament tonight. The tournament game is tomorrow. We have a tournament game Saturday.
Until he masters the rudiments of chess, I wouldn't recommend that he enter the tournament.
Example- My greatest achievement was when i won the 8th grade chess tournament.
The final match in the badminton tournament was very memorable.
The correct verb to use in the sentence is "is." The sentence should read: "Neither the losers nor the winner is happy with the tournament referees." In constructions with "neither...nor," the verb agrees with the noun closest to it, which in this case is "winner," a singular noun.
You can use "out of banned" in a sentence like this: "The team was disqualified from the tournament for using a player who was out of banned substances, violating the league's regulations." In this context, it indicates that the player had been excluded from participating due to the use of substances that are prohibited.
No, it is not. You would need to use a subject pronoun as the subject of a sentence.You and he are the champions of the tournament."Him" is an object pronoun. "Him" would never DO the action in a sentence, instead, "him" has something done "for" or "to".After Jim was in an accident, the whole class took up a collection for him.Please give the completed tests to him.
The big event exactly one week after Christmas is the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena California.
"Everyone found the guidelines for the tournament canonical."
At the beginning of the sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun. Example: Boys Basketball State Tournament