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Yes, the term 'prayer meeting truth' is grammatically correct.

The compound noun 'prayer meeting' is used to describe the noun 'truth'. A noun functioning as an adjective to describe another noun is called an attributive noun.

Some other examples of the compound noun 'prayer meeting' used to describe a noun could be:

prayer meeting supper; prayer meeting sermon; prayer meeting fund-raiser (a compound noun describing a compound noun).

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12y ago

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Can a grammatically correct sentence begin with 'That'?

Yes, using that as a noun or an adjective. Such as: "That which is truth is believable." "That car was parked in my driveway." There are more convoluted forms: "That all of our efforts failed is extremely disheartening."


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It doesn't appear to be correct. There's no verb. What you have is "Love-it-truth". Check out irishgaelictranslator.


What has the author George Foxle written?

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Both are correct, with different meaning. "I believe you" means I accept what you say as the truth. "I believe in you" means I think you will turn out well, or live up to expectations, or succeed at an undertaking. In another sense, "to believe in something" means to consider it real or worthwhile. For example: I believe in paying people compliments even when I don't believe them; or I believe in God.


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A+


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The song is called You are the living truth. Hope that helps.


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