No, that is what we call a fragment.
No, "Unless they answer by tomorrow" is a dependent clause and needs to be paired with an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
Today is today. If today is tomorrow and tomorrow is yesterday, it creates a paradoxical situation where today is always today, regardless of the labels given to it.
This sentence is a complex sentence because it contains an independent clause ("Steven thought the hour would never end") and a dependent clause ("Steven thought"). The dependent clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
"Tomorrow" is always in the future, so it doesn't exist as a tangible moment. Time keeps moving forward, making tomorrow a concept that is always out of reach in the present. Live in the present moment and focus on today instead of waiting for tomorrow to come.
The phrase is "Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday." It reminds us to focus on the present moment rather than worrying about the future or dwelling on the past.
The highest form of thought according to Plato's divided line is "intellection" or "understanding." This level of thought involves reasoning and grasping universal truths beyond appearances or sensory experiences. It is the realm of pure knowledge and intelligible forms.
The complete subject is "Tomorrow you and I."
No. Not unless tomorrow is February 29.
tuseday lol1 that will throw people off is "Today is the tomorrow you thought about yesterday"
Tomorrow might not be as we thought. Who knows, we might die Tomorrow!
Yes
Yes, tomorrow is a normal day unless there are any specific events or circumstances that make it different.
Is this correct? Thought you was going to go to Belks tomorrow.
No, a dependent clause does not express a complete thought on its own. It relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
I think you There. Help any?
When a plan expires tomorrow, it means that the service or benefits associated with that plan will no longer be valid or active starting from the following day. After tomorrow, you will no longer have access to the plan's features.
This is not a complete thought therefore not a complete question.
Yes unless you have a good reason not to.