Upper.
Inquisition-noun-a period of prolonged and intensive questioning or investigation.The murder case was in an inquisition phase for over four months before the murderer was discovered.
"Overpower" is a word that means to put down by force.
No, "complaint" is not a case of suffixation. The word "complaint" comes from the Latin word "complangere" which means "to lament". The word "suffix" comes from the Latin word "suffixum" which means "to fasten beneath".
Title case capitalizes the first letter of each word in a sentence, while sentence case only capitalizes the first letter of the first word in a sentence. For example, "The Quick Brown Fox" is in title case, whereas "The quick brown fox" is in sentence case.
A grand jury should not be considered as being one-sided. The grand jury hears the case put before them, usually with unbiased relations with the subject of the case. It is rare that a juryman would be presented with a case that he/she personally has anything to do with.
Book, which is what you put in it, and case, which is where you put it.
"an" always put "an" before a word starting with a vowel.
Generally, the comma should be placed before the word "otherwise" when used to introduce an alternative or contrast. For example: "I need to leave now, otherwise I will be late."
no
The letter "I" makes the word "I" and can be put before "attend" to make the sentence "I attend".
you need to put "an" before a word that starts with a vowelfor example an animal.
Yes, typically a comma is placed before the word "unless" when it is used to introduce a dependent clause in a sentence. This helps to clarify the relationship between the main clause and the conditional clause.
you would put it after
you put an apostrophe after the N and before the T.
the geography
Let's clarify something before I answer that question. Age before beauty, my dear. Don't put the cart before the horse.
Nothing will happen if you put an hypen, or "-" sing before a word. If you are typing a word and you run out of room, then you would put a - before the page breaks. Also, you could use a hypen between a phrase such as "point-of-view." There are many ways to use a hypen, but using one before a word, I'm not quite sure.