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sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb. Fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.
The -ful part of the word tasteful is a suffix. Suffixes are affixes added to the end of a word to create a new word or modify the meaning. In this case, -ful is added to the root word taste to form the adjective tasteful.
The phrase "I was then too young" is a complete sentence comprised of a subject ("I") and a verb ("was"), therefore it is a declarative sentence. It does not represent a single part of speech as it contains multiple elements functioning together.
I think it would usually be part of the complete predicate.
complete subject
complete predicate
No, a preposition cannot be part of the complete subject. The complete subject is the noun or pronoun that a sentence is about, and it does not include prepositions. Prepositions are used to show the relationship between words in a sentence.
A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence. For example these have periods, but are not sentences:I wanted. We were. When I was there. While he was in the store. If you had.
A sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb.A sentence fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.The above are sentences.Here are some fragments that make no sense:the sentence fragment?what is?your answer in a complete sentencethe boy who lived down the streetbecause he had to go home
Semicolons separate only independent clauses, so the second clause will have to also be a complete sentence.
No, a preposition is not a complete sentence. It is a part of speech that typically comes before a noun or pronoun to show its relationship to another word in the sentence. A complete sentence must have a subject and a verb.
When two complete sentences are in one complete paragraph; does that mean each sentence is a SEPARATE topic? Or is each separate sentence part of the SAME topic?