Leave out the word females. Write it as: The lawyers realized that the judge was going to be tough.
We can't answer that accurately without knowing the sentence.
The sentence (not sentance) is grammatically correct
The word 'merest' is the superlative form of the adjective 'mere', which describes a noun as being nothing more than stated; without additions or modifications.Example Sentence: Lawyers and politicians should avoid the merest hint of impropriety.
obviously
A metaphor is a comparison made without using the words "like" or "as." An example of a sentence including a metaphor might be, "Carolyn was a rock for her family following those hard days after Jim's death."
Without the sentences provided, I can't determine which sentence uses commas correctly.
Without lawyers, there would be NO court system. Without a court system, there would be NO justice. There are good lawyers and bad lawyers, good doctors and bad doctors, good policemen and bad policemen, good teachers and bad teachers, good construction workers and bad construction workers, etc.
A simple predicate is the main verb without the rest of the words following it. The simple predicate in that sentence is "is".
Paul rings the church bells promptly when needed.
Yes, it is a fragment, it's not a sentence. It could be a sentence without the word although. "I finished." is a sentence. Using the word "although" needs a sentence that the word is referring to either in front of it or after it. Although I finished, I was not happy with the work. I'm still hungry, although I finished my lunch.
It mean's that the government can no tax anybody with out there lawyers on or by there sides
"without me" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.