No
A complete thought is expressed in a sentence that contains a subject and a predicate, conveying a clear idea or statement. For example, "The sun sets in the west" is a complete thought because it provides a specific statement that can stand alone. In contrast, fragments like "when the sun sets" do not express a complete idea.
A phrase that doesn't express a complete thought is called a fragment.
No, a dependent clause does not express a complete thought on its own. It relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
The phrase "Is you read a complete sentence" is not grammatically correct. A proper form could be "Is this a complete sentence?" which asks whether the statement is grammatically sound. To clarify, a complete sentence must contain a subject and a predicate and express a complete thought.
yes
Sentence - 1. A group of words that express a complete thought and form a statement, question, exclamation, or a command. 2. The punishment announced to a convicted person in a lawcourt.
No. A fragment does not express a complete thought, and could be a very long phrase or clause: "Jumping merrily from tree to tree as they went" is a fragment (object without predicate). A complete sentence might be only one or two words: "Wait." "He jumped." "Where's Waldo?"
A sentence or an independent clause is a group of words that has a subject, a verb, and forms a complete thought.
Mathematical phrase is a number phrase which does not express a complete thought.
A subordinate clause is a clause that can not stand alone as a complete sentence, because it does not express a complete thought
A dependent clause contains a subject and a verb but needs to be attached to an independent clause to form a complete sentence. It does not express a complete thought on its own and relies on the independent clause for context and meaning.
"Please close the door."