Locked in the basement overnight, the dog howled.
Locked in the basement, I spent my time sorting old clothes.
all the inmates are securely locked in the asylum
Mrs. Claus summoned Santa to tell him that Frosty had locked himself in the greenhouse again.
You start a sentence with whatever word you need to start it with. A sentence can start with "A" if it needs to. A sentence just needs to make sense.
We were frightened by eerie noises coming from the basement. He'll enjoy visiting an eerie haunted house on Halloween.
you dont.and its basement.
A motor that is locked up cannot make a rotation. The motor will not turn over or start. Try to turn the main pulley. When the pulley cannot be by just, the motor is locked up.
It's perfectly fine to start a sentence with likewise, just make sure you have a comma after it.
Yes, I am well aware of the consequences. I am Conscious and sound.
sit that is the only word i can think of "Don't miss the floor joist and fall all the way into the basement"
To fix the grammatical errors in the sentence, you would change "find" to "found" to match the past tense of the sentence. Additionally, you would change "one of the door" to "one of the doors" to make it grammatically correct. Lastly, you would change "broken out" to "broken" to correct the phrasing and make it more concise. The revised sentence would be: "Ram went up to the basement and found that one of the doors was open and the lock was broken."
Yes, but only when the sentence is cause and effect.
After being locked up in prison for 10 years he yearned for the freedom of the the wide open plains where he was born.