No, no, no! This is not how you use intelligiblein a sentence. He is not intelligible because he could understand, but because others could understand. Heaven help us all!
1. He was very intelligible; we understood everything.
2. The technical advisor's response was intelligible, which made a change.
3. Your explanation must be intelligible.
No it not a sentence its a run on sentence.
Example sentence - We would need to turn right at the next street to get to our house.
An empty sentence is a sentence that say too little. The sentence maybe complete with all the right words in all the right places, but need ideas.
Mr. Sattar will arriving on 5th. Is it right sentence?
No. It should be "Is the grammar right in this sentence?"
Well first off no ? Is required at all for the second sentence. And for the first sentence the words is right need to be after the word sentence.
The correct sentence is, "Did you hear?"
A clause can only be part of a larger sentence. "Might is right" is a sentence by itself. With the verb "to be," the word "right" is a predicate adjective.
A "right" or correct sentence contains both a subject and a verb. Simply put, a sentence must be a complete thought. complete sentence = a person, place or thing doing something
No, that's incorrect. The sentence is, "It is coffee."
The sentence placed right before the main one.
The sentence "The furniture has spoilt" is not right, spoilt is not a word. Spoiled is acceptable, though the sentence works better as "The furniture has been spoiled".