dialogue is when people are talking or having a conversation.
I'm not sure I understand your question. Can you provide more context or rephrase it?
dialogue
two esential parts of every declarative or an imperative sentence are subject (about which or whom something is being said) and predicate (what is being said about the subject)
When something or someone is said to have an innate quality, it suggests that it is part of its basic nature or something the subject was born with. An example of a sentence using the word "innate" is "The prosecutor appealed to the judge's innate sense of justice and won the case. "
Yes, "Because you said so" is a sentence. It is a complete sentence known as an exclamatory sentence that expresses a reason or justification for something based on the speaker's authority or instruction.
The two parts of a sentence are the subject and the predicate. The predicate is an action. The subject is a person, place, thing or abstract idea.
A predicate is a grammatical term referring to the part of a sentence that includes the action or state of being of the subject. In simpler terms, it tells what the subject is doing or what is being said about the subject.
It's something said at the end of a sentence by a moogle. It has no meaning ^^;;
A subject is a noun (including gerunds and infinitives) or pronoun, so it represents a person, place, thing, concept or situation. A predicate is a verb, so it represents an action or a state of being.
The word "quotation" can function as a noun in a sentence. It refers to the act of repeating or mentioning something said or written by someone else.
If you have done something that causes people to talk about you, what is being said about you at any moment in time depends on many factors and by whom it is being said.
She said the autopsy had turned up something really strange.