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despite pompous, he was an entertaining person
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A complete sentence has a subject and a predicate, the subject is this case would be the person who attended Yale which is missing so the sentence isn't really complete its more in point form.
Arrogant, Pompous. A Braggart
It could be a complete sentence if it was the answer to a question such as "Who's that girl?"
oh my gosh that famous person has 4 guards with her that is the complete sentence
A "right" or correct sentence contains both a subject and a verb. Simply put, a sentence must be a complete thought. complete sentence = a person, place or thing doing something
It means the person you are speaking to is a pompous fool!
A complete sentence is a group of words that contain a person, place or thing doing something, and work together to express a complete thought.
A complete sentence contains a person, place or thing doing something. The person, place or thing is called the subject of the sentence. The "doing something" part of the sentence is called the action, predicate or verb. Traditionally, text books say that a complete sentence is one that contains both a subject and a predicate.
A not entertaining person
its person or place thing thats the story is about