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Yes you can, but take it to a bike shop or someone who knows what they are doing
The structure used in this sentence is a compound sentence. It consists of two independent clauses, "Mom knows who ate the last piece of pie" and "but won't tell," joined by the coordinating conjunction "but."
compound-complex A+
Its right next to the, "Someone who knows about cars should be doing this" lever.
A piece of a sentence is called a fragment.
No. A fragment does not express a complete thought, and could be a very long phrase or clause: "Jumping merrily from tree to tree as they went" is a fragment (object without predicate). A complete sentence might be only one or two words: "Wait." "He jumped." "Where's Waldo?"
compound-complex A+
In the sentence "you have said your piece," "piece" is the correct word. It refers to someone expressing their opinion or viewpoint on a matter.
The word 'ferule' is a noun; a word for a flat piece of wood used to punish and discipline children in a school setting.A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentence: "The nun called Carla to the front of the class and beat her with the ferule."(object of the preposition 'with')
I have a piece of candy.
I had a piece of pie for dessert.
The word 'squirrels' is a plural noun. A noun can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The squirrels feasted on spilled popcorn. (subject of the sentence)The tree that the squirrels inhabited was just above the park vendors' wagons. (subject of the relative clause)The toddler watched the squirrels intently. (direct object of the verb 'watched')The girl threw a piece of her cookie to the squirrels. (object of the preposition 'to')