No, correct usage would be "...everyone is not the same"; as in, "Aren't you glad that everyone is not the same?".
Yes both words have same meaning!
"Brave" and "courageous" are synonyms, whether they occur in the same sentence or not.
One way to answer the question 'How to write a question and answer in the same sentence?' is to do it like this!
This is usually the closing sentence.
i write the same sentence
I have several sentences for you.In the same way you write any sentence, you write a sentence with "in the same way."You ride a unicycle in the same way you ride a bicycle.You paint in the same way you draw.Both of them are in the same way since that virus is going around.
No, sentence fragments and phrases are not the same. A phrase is a group of related words that does not contain a subject and a verb, while a sentence fragment is a group of words that appears to be a sentence but is missing a subject, a verb, or both. In other words, a phrase is a fragment whereas a sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence.
Yes. It is a false sentence but a sentence all the same.
The underlined part of the sentence "Reese and Ted were on the same team" refers to the subject of the sentence, which consists of the nouns "Reese" and "Ted." They are the individuals being discussed, and the sentence conveys that they belong to the same team.
The term for saying a sentence in a different way but with the same meaning is "paraphrasing."
Yes you can say would and have in the same sentence. (for example)I would have to go down the other lane.
The term for a word or sentence that reads the same in both directions is "palindrome."