Yes, after "next."
You can use the word 'Apart' in a sentence by using a comma. (Example) We went on most of the rides at Alton Towers today, apart from Nemesis and Ripsaw. Or you can use it without a comma. (Example) We pulled the loaf of bread apart and all four of us had our own piece.
A girl takes a small piece of bread from a sacrament tray.
Comma comes from the Greek word komma meaning a piece cut off.
This soup is so good that I want to sop it all up with a piece of bread.
I ate the last piece of matzoh bread during Passover.
The piece of bread fizz after they mix it with chemicals
direct objectin the following sentence, how is the underlined phrase used? Both Joe and I wanted the last piece of pizza.Beth and joeBeth and joe
piece of bread
The indefinite article that completes the sentence is "a." The corrected sentence would read: "He picked up a piece of fruit out of the bowl and bit into it." This indicates that he selected one unspecified piece of fruit from the bowl.
A crumb is a tiny piece of food, usually from bread. Margaret finished her toast quickly and did not realize she had crumbs on her shirt.
Piece of bread
A semicolon is that piece of punctuation which looks like a comma with a period above it. It looks like this;and it is used to separate independent clauses within the same sentence, as in "He came; he saw; he conquered."