A sentence with decomposers:
Mushrooms are known as decomposers because they decompose things.
The verb tense is the same in both examples. Both examples can be used correctly."Where were you?" is a complete sentence."Where you were" is not complete on its own. "Is that where you were standing?"
No, the correct way to write the sentence would be: "That happens because I did not read the complete sentence."
Yes, it is a complete, correct sentence.
No. It will only BRING is correct but this is not a complete sentence. It will only bring what? You need to complete the thought.
Yes, the sentence "She does not always complete her homework" is correct.
A complete and correct sentence requires a subject and a predicate.
No, the sentence "i wants to go here" is not complete because it is missing the verb "want" in the correct form. A correct and complete sentence would be "I want to go here."
The sentence 'Correct the sentence.' is a correct sentence. The subject is implied 'you'; the verb is 'correct'; the direct object is 'sentence'; and it is a complete thought. These are all the elements required for a complete sentence.
If it's used as a question, yes. If not, then it is a correct phrase but not a complete sentence.
Sure, this a complete sentence.
The sentence "Rhoda's Crazy" is not grammatically correct. It is missing a verb to make a complete sentence.
number 1 is correct because it is a complete sentence