An encyclopedia is a noun that refers to a reference work that contains articles on a number of topics that deal with the entire range of the human knowledge. An example in a sentence: "Students are only allowed to use the encyclopedia in the library.
I use an encyclopedia to do my homework.
Ex: The encyclopedia was large.
An encyclopedia is usually found in a library
Any sentence attempting to utilize the entire encyclopedia would inevitably become a run-on sentence, or at least a very long paragraph. Yes, it does upset me to see the encyclopedia being used as a door stop!
That subject was deleted from this year's encyclopedia. Unfamiliar with Namibia, Bill had to look up its entry in the encyclopedia.
An encyclopedia helps you not only to know everything but also to be good at nothing.
Certainly. It would of necessity be a complex sentence.
I referred to the encyclopedia to find information on the solar system.
Copy, by hand, the entire Encyclopedia Britannicacopy an encyclopedia
make aresearch on folklore
The main clause of an imperative statement starts with a verb form, because the subject (you) is understood. An imperative sentence makes a command, request, or suggestion.Example:"Bring me the paper!" (means you must bring me the paper)Example:"To find the answer, look in the encyclopedia." (you should look in the encyclopedia)
In fact, this sentence contains that word. The fact of the matter was that we simply couldn't do it. I got my facts from an encyclopedia. Nonfiction books are facts.