I could not find 'gumbled' in my favorite etymological dictionary.
I could give you a sentence easily. You could also write your own sentences if you tried.
I could not afford to eat in restaurants. Nor could anyone knew.
You use the semi-colon when each part of the sentence is a complete thought and could actually be broken into a sentence of its own.
'Well to do' means 'rich'. So a possible sentence could be "You could tell by the quality of her clothes that she was well to do"
There are plenty of ways you could use earlobes in a sentence. You could say that someone has attached earlobes for example.
You cannot end a sentence with I could not. I could not anyhow. Could you? Maybe you could. Maybe someone else could. But I know I could not. Example Sentence: I know I could not.
It could be used in any sentence as an adjective. That sentence could be, "I'm quite busty and I fear it would look matronly on me."
Somebody will have to improve on this answer. One similarity between a sentence and a sentence fragment could be a sentence's length. If somebody says, "Who did that?" you could answer, "I did," and that is a sentence... but in a different scenario, that may be considered a sentence fragment. Why? Because if that sentence was all by itself, "I did," would be nonsense. What did "I" do? "I did jump," could then complete it.
Your question is itself a sentence which uses the word "could".
I could give you a sentence easily. You could also write your own sentences if you tried.
How could you do that to me! That is an exclaiming sentence in literature.
The verb in the given sentence, "could be" is in a conditional present tense.
to perserve your pictures in a creative and more effective way than by sticking them gumbled up into a photo album. it is also a great fun thing to do with your kids... it opens doors to life that u didn't know where there :)
An example of a sentence with are could be:"We are very happy that you could come to our party."
Yes, it can be a complete sentence. Someone could say to you "You are looking well" and you could reply "As are you.".
Yeah! A definition sentence, but still a sentence.
Could you please be more specific.