The use of the word "to be" in a sentence is that it is used to show future expectancy.
The word "to be" in a grammatical sentence usually means future.
Including is a verb or noun.
In some languages, yes. But not in English. All English grammatical inflections (not that there are very many of them and most of them are -s) are suffixes. Prefixes are used to change the meaning of the word not as grammatical indicators. In Swahili, on the other hand, all grammatical inflections are prefixes. Swahili does not use suffixes.
No. An élite is something individuals belong to. But the fault is semantic, not grammatical.
To use "grammatical" in a sentence, you could say: "She always makes sure her sentences are grammatically correct." This showcases the use of the word "grammatical" in the context of proper sentence structure.
You could use the word "completely" as a subsitute for "totally".
It can be both a noun and a verb depending on the way you use it.
Please give me examples in the sentence where the denotation is used!
A dictionary would tell you the word meaning. Grammatical textbooks would tell you if you used grammar correctly.The professor took twenty years to solve the multifacted math problem.
Grammar is the proper term that provides rules when writing.. Grammar covers rules for word use, subject, predicate and general sentences structure/
A Dictionary will give you the meaning of a word, its etymology and its roots, where a Thesaurus will give you words which have a similar (often the same) meaning and can be used in a similar context.
"Grammatical" refers to something that follows the rules and structures of grammar in a particular language. It indicates correctness in terms of syntax, sentence structure, and the use of words within a sentence.