comound complex sentence
'Until the class begins' is not a complete sentence, and therefore it can not be classified. It is a clause, introduced by the conjunction 'until.' 'Until the class begins' is not a complete thought. We're still waiting for the rest of the sentence. Something will or will not happen, take place, be allowed, etc., 'until the class begins.' Without that something being stated, there is not a complete thought. It takes a complete thought to make a sentence. 'The class begins' is a complete sentence. It sounds like an announcement of some kind. It is perhaps a little awkward or stilted, but it is a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought. Furthermore, it is a declarative sentence. It states a fact.
A declarative sentence is a sentence that makes a statement. It is the complete opposite of a question and only states facts.
The United States is home to millions of people from overseas.
Following the failed attempt at secession by the Confederacy, the United States considers itself to be indivisible.
No, "Is your jaw dropped open" is a question. It is asking about the position of your jaw.
It would be easier for someone to answer your question if you put it in a COMPLETE sentence, telling us what you want to know ABOUT colonialism for the developing states.
Please resubmit your question and write a COMPLETE sentence. What do you want to know about the Civil War and southern seceding states?
I'm afraid I don't understand your question. Try rephrasing it in a complete sentence.
complete subjects = The United States, Snow capped mountains, complete predicates = is a beautiful country, tower over the western plains.
Missing words in a quotation: "We the people...do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."An incomplete sentence or thought: I wish I had given her a better...
In English composition, a 'clear sentence' states one main thought with subject, verb and potentially an object and clauses.A clear sentence can be as simple as:I drove to work.A more complicated but clear sentence might be:Because it was raining, I drove to work rather than riding my bike.
run-on-sentence