There are several different ways to do this. You could make a compound sentence by combining them using and, or, but, or so. You could turn one of them into a subordinate clause and make a complex sentence.
no one can ever remain silent if they know the answer two the question
"I give you" is actually three words, but here's a sentence. I give you two sentences instead of just one.
step one: Bring a pen.step two: bring a paper . step three: write with the pen on the paper sentences in them the word recapture And this is how you make a sentence with recapture.
One example- You have to hurry and pay your tuition in two days. :)
Yes, I can. Can you? Or did you mean, "can one make a sentence about sitting?"
Jesus wept. To actually answer the question, yes. As long as one of the words is a subject and one is a verb it is considered a complete sentence. The above sentence is an example of that. Some others are: I ran. I slept. She drove. We wondered.
A sentence does not have a plural form. A sentence can be a compound sentence; two independent clauses, usually joined by a conjunction. Your sentence has one plural noun, 'friends'; the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural but we know that it is singular because it says 'you are one of'. The only way to make the subject pronoun 'you' into a plural is to drop the words 'one of', making the sentence: You are my friends.
The simplest sentence consists of only a subject and a predicate (a noun and a verb) and is only one clause."Scott ran." is an example of such a sentence. It has one noun (Scott), one verb (ran), and is an independent clause (it stands alone as a sentence).A slightly more complex sentence can have two clauses as is evidenced by the following modification to the earlier example:"Scott ran, and he made it in time." The original sentence now contains two clauses (an independent one and a subordinate one).In general, though, "simple sentence" usually refers to a sentence with only one clause.
A compound sentence consists of two independent clauses that are usually separated by a comma, like in this example.
Lilly made an error by spelling goose with one "o" instead of two.
Compound sentence.