I admit the deed! - tear up the planks! - here, here! - it is the beating of his hideous heart!"
I admit the deed! - tear up the planks! - here, here! - it is the beating of his hideous heart!"
The clincher sentence in "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe is the narrator's confession: "Villains! Dissemble no more! I admit the deed! Tear up the planks! Here, here! It is the beating of his hideous heart!" This sentence reveals the narrator's guilt and paranoia, as he can no longer contain his guilt and reveals the source of the mysterious sound he hears. It serves as the climax of the story, showcasing the narrator's descent into madness and ultimate confession of his crime.
The clincher isn't a conclusive or decisive point or argument. It's merely a sentence that sums up the relevance of the paragraph. You open each paragraph with a sentence that says what the paragraph is about and how it ties into the thesis. You should end each paragraph with a sentence that sums up what the paragraph was about and reminds the reader how that idea ties into the thesis.
you make my entire ballbag moist.
No, but it can have the meaning of an entire sentence.
Yesterday, the entire city was under a blackout.
Certainly. (where appropriate)
The sentence "I ate my entire dinner even though I don't care for pizza." is a complex sentence. It consists of an independent clause "I ate my entire dinner" and a dependent clause "even though I don't care for pizza." The dependent clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence, making it a complex sentence.
An entire sentence can't be a conjunction, and there is no conjunction in that sentence.
the entire claimancy
The entire family was intrigued.
The entire purpose of the Forever Stamps was that you can use them for one ounce of First Class Postage forever. No additional postage is necessary.