Better to say: We were sent the following samples through TNT on ..................(the date should be clear, 01.04 isn't very clear).
After this sentence there would be a list of the 'samples'.
Example sentence - Think through carefully before you act unkindly.
Here is an example sentence for 'opaque':You cannot see through a piece of wood as it is opaque, which means that it does not allow light to pass through.
The rain permeated through the screen.
As a modifier to the verb. Sentence: "The boy was running through traffic". Using the adverb "recklessly" as an adverb: "The boy was recklessly running through traffic".
Example sentence - He was afraid the water would continue to seep into the basement through the cracks in the cement.
The sentence is almost correct. However, it should be "You sent it through DHL yesterday."
The board chose, through a historic vote, to elect Bob Brown.
This sentence is grammatically correct but does not have much meaning.
I thumbed through the book to find the correct answer.
Both phrases are correct . . . they simply mean two somewhat different things.
Radiation is a kind of thermal energy that can travel through space. The only word properly capitalized is 'Radiation' because it is the first word in the sentence. The noun 'space' is a common noun and should not be capitalized.
They went through the tunnel on the train. They were through with the project and went home happy.
Back in the days before computers, the only way to check that a sentence was correct was to refer to a grammar textbook. Now, of course, a sentence can be run through your word processing program's grammar, or through a more thorough professional online grammar checker.
Yes.
The preposition is through. The prepositional phrase "through the woods" is an adverbial phrase modifying the verb "hike."
Hurtling through the air, Christopher saw several spit wads, would make it clear that the modifier "hurtling through the air" is describing Christopher's action of moving quickly rather than the spit wads flying through the air.
Red