No, because it needs a verb
A complete sentence includes a subject, verb, and expresses a complete thought. On the other hand, a sentence fragment is incomplete as it lacks one of these components or does not express a full idea.
The quilt had amazing patchwork. Another good sentence would be, the woman was able to complete the patchwork all by hand.
The suitable preposition for this sentence would be "by." The complete sentence would be: "He shook me by the hand and helped me off with my coat." In this context, "by" is used to indicate the manner in which he shook your hand, emphasizing the action of shaking hands.
The host's sinister Halloween costume was really made complete with it's false, clammy hand.
The phrase "having good time" is a fragment because it lacks a subject and a complete verb, making it unable to stand alone as a complete thought. It could be revised to form a complete sentence, such as "I am having a good time." A run-on sentence, on the other hand, consists of two or more independent clauses that are improperly joined without appropriate punctuation or conjunctions.
Cars in France are left hand drive (traffic drives on the right hand side of the road)
A sentence for "to dress in hand-me-downs" : My mother was frugal that she had to dress me in hand-me-downs.
The subject in the sentence is "you."
"Please hand me the pliers" is a sentence in itself. -You said it perfectly.
A sentence is a complete clause with a subject and a finite verb. A sentence fragment is not a complete clause, but is part of a clause (often lacking the verb to make a full sentence). For instance, a sentence fragment could be: The house that I used to live in. Swimming in the river. I cannot find. (missing the object, the 'what') When he came home. The business around the corner. The cigarette in my hand. As he kissed. How did? Many questions. When she saw the spider. NOTE: NONE of those should have periods because they are NOT complete sentences. MOST need a comma, and the rest of the sentence. A couple only need the rest of the 'complete thought', such as: The cigarette in my hand was burning. How did she know where I lived? Many questions are difficult to answer.
Yes. A grammatically correct sentence (to begin with) has to have a subject (int this case, hand) and a verb (is). The sentence does need to be capitalized and punctuated correctly though...
The correct answer is: D. Linda hand me the sealed envelope. (Subject) Linda (Verb) hand (Object) me (Direct object) the sealed envelope.