You will end up in jail if you do that.
I want to end up on Long Island so I'll drive through New York City.
You can use "end up" in a sentence to describe a result or outcome that was not planned or intended. For example, "I thought I would take a short nap, but I ended up sleeping for hours."
You can use a period (.), an exclamation mark (!), or a question mark (?) to end a sentence.
to be with
No. When you end a sentence that way you don't have a proper end. At "what" or "where" is left out. Your "at" needs a direct object.
"Me" is used at the end of a sentence when you are stressing that you are the one performing the action or when it is the object of the verb. For example, "He gave the book to me."
No, the sentence should use a hyphen to connect "dead end" as a compound modifier: "He knew he had a dead-end job the first day he showed up for work."
Josh ended up with one million dollars after he won the lottery.
If i can end up dodging the necessity to login to this site, I will answer the question.
You can use a period (.), an exclamation mark (!), or a question mark (?) to end a sentence.
to be with
"Me" is used at the end of a sentence when you are stressing that you are the one performing the action or when it is the object of the verb. For example, "He gave the book to me."
Why does my cousin always end up coming at the most inopportune time imaginable?
Try shortening it. that way it wouldn't end up as a paragraphy which much detail
No. When you end a sentence that way you don't have a proper end. At "what" or "where" is left out. Your "at" needs a direct object.
Seven. What did you bring that book that I hate to be read to from out of up through for?
Try shortening it. that way it wouldn't end up as a paragraphy which much detail
A preposition is used before a noun or pronoun to show its relationship to another word in the sentence. It indicates location, time, direction, or other relationships between elements in a sentence.
at the end of a sentence.