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Sentences that end in periods are called declarative sentences. These are statements that convey information or make a statement.
Interrogative sentences, which are questions, use question marks at the end. These sentences seek information, clarification, or confirmation.
No, it does not. Parentheses are used to include information that is not essential to the sentence. They can also be used to de-emphasize information. Of course, you can have complete sentences in parentheses, but it is not necessary.
Jewish people, gays, gypsies, political prisoners, and prisoners (both ones still serving sentences and those already done with serving sentences).
Embedded sentences are sentences that are included within a larger sentence. They provide additional information or clarify the main idea of the sentence. These embedded sentences are often enclosed within commas, parentheses, or dashes to set them apart from the main sentence.
The closing of a business letter has just enough sentences to convey information for follow up or response and to thank the recipient. This is usually two or three sentences.
Questions. Questions end with a question mark. Sentences that are a question usually start with Who, What, Why, Where, When, How, Will, and Is.Examples:What types of sentences end in a question mark?Who is the muffin man?
There are brackets in a sentence to separate the important information from the words in the brackets.
oral summaries
A group of related sentences that express a central idea is called a paragraph. Paragraphs are used to organize ideas and present information cohesively in writing.
Topic sentence: this describes the focus of the paragraph. Factual information: sentences on actual information on the topic. Interpretive sentences: your opinions on the above facts. concluding sentence: sums up the paragraph.
c. sam has seen the same man in new york city.