sister-in-law
The compound word in the sentence is "sister-in-law."
Example sentence - We knew our lives were in danger during the hurricane.
The present tense of the verb "live" in this sentence would be "lives." For example, "She lives with her parents."
A declarative sentence tells about something. A declarative sentence does not ask a question or give a command. A declarative sentence sometimes ends with an exclamation point. A declarative sentence can be a simple or a compound sentence. All of these sentences are declarative sentences.
The compound word 'stay-at-home' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In a sentence like: My dad is a stay-at-home. The adjective is functioning as a subject complement (an adjective following a linking verb which restates, describes, the subject of the sentence).
Yes, a comma is typically used after the state in a sentence to separate it from the rest of the sentence. For example, "She lives in Seattle, Washington."
sister-in-law
sister-in-law
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He lives in Minnesota.
She lives in ely, Minnesota
No, because she lives in ohio
you put lives into a sentence like this. for example:Sophie lives in Pennsylvania. so basically before a Pronoun
No, he lives in LA & Atlanta
Example sentence - We knew our lives were in danger during the hurricane.
He lives on Second Street. Cats have nine lives.