In school sometimes you might feel like a nobody.
Do I need to use a period after the abbreviation of the word etc.? What is the correct punctuation for ending a sentence with etc.?
No, you do not put an extra period after "etc." since the period at the end of "etc." serves as the ending punctuation for the sentence.
Definitive sentence: You have been a naughty girl. (sentence stating a fact ending in a period) Exclamatory sentence: You have been a very, very naughty girl! (sentence with strong feeling or emotion, usually ending in exclamation point) A sentence using the word naughty (to answer your question) is a sentence.
No, you do not need to add an additional period if "etc." is within parentheses at the end of a sentence. The period that ends the abbreviation "etc." also serves as the sentence-ending punctuation.
There is nobody home.Why won't nobody talk to me.Nobody came to the rescue.
nobody know what that word means
Yes, the word 'nobody' is an indefinite pronoun.
It may be. There is no word in English that cannot begin or end a sentence. The idea that certain word are unfit to end a sentence comes from Latin grammar, not English.
This is the situation of my country currently. This is a sentence ending with the word currently.
The word nobody can be considered a pronoun and a noun. It is a pronoun in a sentence like nobody is here. It is a noun when used like she was a nobody until her song caught on.
An additional period is not necessary at the end of a sentence that ends in the word "inc."
earliest period