A preposition which denotes the reason for (or, cause of) something, "because" can be used very diversely in a sentence. Just one example is as follows: "He failed the big test because he had refused to study."
The word "because" is used to provide an explanation or reason for something in a sentence. For example, "I brought an umbrella because it was raining."
You can use an underscore to remove a word out of a sentence. It can be placed where the word was.
He mistook her for a foreigner because of her accent.
The man strangled his wife because she slapped him. Is it ok?
when can you use fellow in a sentence
The community leaders issued a strong denunciation of the discriminatory policy.
It is hard to make a sentence with chid because chid is not a word.
No, because it is not a real word.
It's obvious that you don't know how to use the word obvious in a sentence because you asked a question on how to use it.
You are likely to fail at life because you can't think of a sentence to use the word likely in.
The word context is a noun. A sentence with this word is: She was upset because she took the joke out of context.
He is a naive person because he was raised like that. That is the sentence containing the word naive.
The community leaders issued a strong denunciation of the discriminatory policy.
yes because for example sentence she was diffident about her opinion
Yes because you just did. :)
yes because you just did
You don't because "preceive" is not a word.
No, I can't because "originative" is not a word in the English language.