we pack up to go home in the afternoon.
I enjoyed a relaxing cup of tea on the porch one sunny afternoon.
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
It depends on the sentence: You will be coming to the lab in the afternoon! Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon? This afternoon, you will be coming the the lab, won't you?
Yes, "afternoon" should be capitalized when it is the first word in a sentence or when it is part of a proper noun (e.g., "Good Afternoon").
The past perfect tense of "stop" in the given sentence would be: "The storm had stopped in the early afternoon."
This sentence is a declarative sentence because it is making a statement.
It depends on the sentence: You will be coming to the lab in the afternoon! Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon? This afternoon, you will be coming the the lab, won't you?
The nouns are: team, practice, and afternoon.
I have piano class in the afternoon
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
The afternoon was warm and quiet, just the way I like it.
No, I prefer: "I am coming to the laboratory this afternoon."
"End" and "afternoon" are the nouns.
Yes, the phrase "this afternoon after breakfast" is a run-on sentence because it contains two independent clauses without proper punctuation or conjunction to connect them. To correct it, you could separate the clauses into two sentences or add a conjunction like "and" or "so."
If the sentence is spoken: "Good afternoon, all."
She arrived at the cafe in the mid-afternoon, just as the sun was starting to dip below the horizon.
no, but this sentence is they had a playful play date this afternoon.