I loved my shop class , which started yesterday.
(Note, it is all in the past tense, as it happened yesterday.)
The verbs love and start do not agree, since they express actions that happened at different times; replacing start with started would fix the sentence.
Yesterday in science class, i made a chemical that solvents salt.
There was an equivalent fraction in math class yesterday afternoon.
I'm terribly sorry to have to ask you about your absence from class yesterday. Because I was distracted, the biscuits were terribly burned.
class
They're
You Should Cooperate In Class Everyday.
I am capable of providing concise answers to your questions.
The antecedent for the pronouns 'their' and 'they' is class.
Most often, the word class is a noun. example: He teaches the fifth grade class. In the following sentence, class is an adjective: Our class project won first place. The word class describes the project. Therefore, it is an adjective.
Yes, "class" should be capitalized when referring to a specific course or academic subject. For example, "I am taking a History class this semester."
The verb in this sentence is 'goes'. If you were to take out 'to investigate how much litter there is', then you would still have a complete sentence. : )