The dog wagged his tail.
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.
This sentence is a sentence or indepedent clause (It has one subject = Bailey and one verb = slept) so that, is a sentence .
The verb in that sentence is "are".
Kochee is not a sentence
The modern English sentence of 'she is married to him' can be translated to the Zulu language. Transliterated the sentence is 'Eseshadile kuya hi.'
The dog wagged his tail in the middle of the road.
The dog wagged its tail.
"Wagged" has one syllable.
The dog wagged it's tail to show it was friendly.
One example sentence using "its" is: "The dog wagged its tail happily."
The possessive form is the possessive adjective (a pronoun) its.The possessive adjective is describing the dog's tail as the tail belonging to it: its tail.
A simple predicate is the verb and any auxiliary verbs that might be present in the sentence.Examples:The dog barks.I will go.She will not scream. (not is an adverb and not part of the simple predicate.)The simple predicate is the main verb in the predicate that tells what the subject does.The complete predicate is the verb and the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb.A sentence can have more than one predicate.Examples:The dog wagged its tail. (the simple predicate is 'wagged')The dog wagged its tail. (the complete predicate is 'wagged its tail')The dog wagged its tail and ran for the ball. (the two simple predicates are 'wagged' and 'ran')
The past tense of "wag" is "wagged."
Here is a sentence with the word 'dog':The dog wagged its tail vigorously and barked in sheer bliss when it sensed my arrival.
No, it is not an adverb. The word wagged is a past tense verb.
there is no oppisite
One example of a sentence with apostrophe in a word family's is: "The dog's tail wagged excitedly." This sentence shows possession, where the tail belongs to the dog.