The woman set the box on the table and told the over enthusiastic dog to sit.
She was about to set the box on the table, when she decided to sit it on the arm of her chair instead.
Sit-ins were a common form of protest in the 1960s. People used to be arrested for participating in sit-ins.
rod, sit, put, set
It could be either. 'Sit!' as an imperative form of the verb to sit (an instruction given to a dog, for example) is a sentence in its own right. Sit can also be just one word in a sentence, for example 'I asked you not to sit there.' In that case it would be a fragment.
I liked to sit down and watch tv after a long day.
Something that you sit on add one letter to kit
No one like to sit next to the crochety student.
You can sit here. What is the naming part of the sentance?
The word "set" in the given sentence should be replaced by "sat". The intransitive verb "sit" with principal parts "sit, sat, sat" indicates a motion by the subject of the sentence in which the verb occurs. The verb "set" with invariant principal parts is transitive and would require an object. The sentence as given could be correct if it were continued with "a display", but it would be more idiomatic word order to insert "a display" between "up" and "on" in the sentence given to convey this meaning.
"Set the bag of cement down over there" is the correct usage. ---- To Set = to place something deliberately to adjust something to arrange something To Sit = to put your bottom in a chair to rest
It is a sentence. It is a declarative sentence also because it's giving a demand.
Yes it is definitely. Sit quietly is an emphatic/command sentence. This type of sentence doesn't follow the usual S V O pattern of an English sentence. Other examples: Be quiet, sit down,
This question does not sit well with me.