Want this question answered?
This depends on the crime and criminal history. If the crime committed is Robbery 1st or Assault 1st then 85% of the sentence must be served. Sex offenses also require 85%. If the offender has a poor criminal history (2 or more prior felony convictions) then at least 50% or 2.5 years must be served. No priors then release is probable in less than one year. Keep in mind jail time served prior to plea or finding of guilt counts towards the prison sentence.
Virginia born and raised, he served as a representative of Kentucky.
He served in Parliament.
I served dinner to everyone in my family yesterday
The average sentence for murder convictions in the US is life. Versus "real time" served (I'm assuming you mean) is nigh on 100%. Generally, "life" in the US is life, until death, whence one is sent off to his dirt nap, to the great beyond, to the worm farm that comes after. Seriously, 98% of all those convicted of murder serve life sentences, or are executed--by and large the same sentence.
3 years 5 months...?
You need to see a lawyer for exact details on your particular situation in your particular jurisdiction. In general, each charge carries it own sentence. Consider this - a person gets convicted of robbery and gets 5 years. He/she serves 3 years with probation for 2 years. While out on probation, the same person commits another robbery which carries another 5 year sentence. The court probably will NOT give the person "credit" the robber on his/her second conviction for time served for the first conviction.
A palatable French dish was served to the guest.
A few moths to 2 yrs maybe more depends how much you stole or how many people you killed.
A (adjective) selection (subject) of (preposition) cheeses (object of preposition) served (verb) with (preposition) grapes (object of preposition). For starters, 'A selection of cheeses served with grapes' is not a sentence, it is a phrase. A sentence requires a subject and a verb. While the word 'SERVED' is usually a verb, in this case it is being used to describe the cheeses, it does not indicate any action taking place. What happened with the selection of cheeses and grapes? If the phrase were rewritten: 'A selection of cheeses WAS served with grapes', then you would have an action. A selection of cheeses- is the subject of the sentence. was served- is the verb in the sentence, WAS is an auxiliary verb. with grapes - A prepositional phrase modifying the subject. - wjs1632 -
Cake and program are the nouns in that sentence.
"Served" because a verb is an action word.