As he did not have all the facts there was a good chance that he could jump to the wrong conclusion on the issue.
She jumped to the wrong conclusion about her friend's absence, assuming he didn't care, when in reality he was sick.
"Can you jump over the hurdles in the race?"
No, "double dutch" should not be capitalized in this sentence as it is being used generically to describe a type of jump rope activity.
Yes it can. For example: "Clean your room!" is both imperative and exclamatory because it tells a command and expresses a sudden burst of feeling.Another answerI think no.Imperative and exclamations perform different functions. Imperatives give commands while exclamations express feelings or emotions. In the example above a command is being given, "Your room is a mess!" expresses feeling / emotion.
Use "and" to add more information or ideas, showing a connection between them. Use "but" to introduce a contrast or contradiction between two elements in a sentence. Choose between them based on the relationship you want to convey between the elements in your sentence.
Yes, 'Listen to me.' is an imperative sentence, the subject is implied: 'You listen to me.' Other common imperative sentences with an implied subject are, 'Look out!', 'Stop!', or 'Jump.' The implied subject of these sentences is 'you'.
She jumped the gun. She started at 3, when the other started at GO!
The idiom, 'jump out of your skin,' was first seen in England in the 1800s. It refers to a person being so scared that they 'jump out of their skin,' by dying and becoming a ghost.
jump a lots
jokers
Yes, because you don't know the full story. And if you jump into conclusion you might just trouble yourself.
to jump to a conclusion
never jump to conclusion
"Can you jump over the hurdles in the race?"
How long did you want the sentence to be? The frog was a competitor in the Animal Olympics long jump event. Frogs can jump long distances.
"Jump on the bandwagon" IS a sentence.
To respond brusquely could be to rebuff. Perhaps what is sought is the idiom, which is "jump down (one's) throat."
Walk to the edge and jump in the waterWalk and jump are both verbs.