When I came to USA, my English language is so weak. After I started to visit a Psychoanalysis Counselor, my English Language improved overnight.
My brother,Kevin,recalled to get his homework.
When you wish to clarify the subject of a sentence. The appositive comes after the subject separated by commas. In the sentence below, appositive is in capitals. Helen, THE FACE THAT LAUNCHED A THOUSANDS SHIPS TO BEGIN THE TEN YEAR TROJAN WAR, was the daughter of Zeus...
I believe that when you have an appositive in a sentence that when it is not necessary you surround it with commas and when it is necessary, you don't use commas. This is what I believe the rule is, but I am not 100% sure. Anyone feel free to correct me if this is in any way not correct.
My previous house, a tomb, is over 200 years old!
Tomorrow we are going to have steak, but the meat must marinate overnight.
By analyzing the sentence to determine what function the word is serving in the sentence. If the word is part of the subject of the sentence or a clause in the sentence, is a "predicate nominative", is a "nominative of address" or is a "nominative absolute", or is an appositive to one of the previously mentioned uses, "I" should be used, because all of the noted uses require a nominative case. For any other function in a sentence, the objective case form "me" should be used.
To make mushy peas you need to steep marrowfat peas overnight in clean cold water before cooking them.
appositive
appositive
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it. An appositive is set of in a sentence with a comma before it and a comma after it.The given sentences revised to use an appositive is:"Black cowboys, African-Americans who herd cattle, helped settle the old west."
The dog had no shelter and was walking alone in the darkness.
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.