"Taxation WITHOUT representation".
When translating Latin, the part of sentence in which the word is used plays a part in deciding the proper version of the word, as there are many different endings. The phrase do not, however, simply translates to non in Latin.
yes, "With the proper help" is a prepositional phrase. :)
The word England is a proper noun
The word England is a proper noun
England - and + ish = English.
France - French England - English Like proper nouns, proper adjectives are always capitalized.
Proper is an adjective, factor is a noun.
its a proper noun
Colonists argued that the Stamp Act was not proper because it was a form of taxation without representation. This was a tax set up by the British Parliament to tax goods the Colonists needed.
No. "You must believe it" or "you need to believe it" is a better phrase.
There is NO proper verb phrase in that series of words.
Yes. She is the subject. =)