Can we get a fix on his location?
The location of the town made deliveries difficult.
you can create ANY sentence with the word there. there is the room. the location is over there. i was there yesterday
No! Location is a noun and as a subject would have no predicate.However, there is one form, the proverbial "Location. Location. Location."Here, each use is not a sentence, but the punchline of an implied message, that being the aphorism "In real estate, there are three important factors : location, location, location."
The word "its" is the possessive of the word "it," and "it's" is a contraction of "it is." The capitalization of the "I" simply depends on its location in a sentence.
The location of your bed is your bedroom. A GPS receiver can indicate your exact geographic position.
The word "country" functions as a noun in the sentence, referring to a nation or sovereign state. It is part of the subject of the sentence or may be used to describe a location or place.
No, "in" is a preposition. It is used to indicate location, position, or time in a sentence.
The price is reasonable and, moreover, the location is perfect.
I hope you really wanted the word "this" used in a sentence. This is a word that indicates an item or a location. This is the correct package. This is the correct street to turn right.
If I knew the location of the treasure I would guard the secret zealously.
A cartographer helped draw out a map of the family's location
Get the local weather forecast for any location in the world.
The dateline stated the location and date of the news story.