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It is called an acronym.
A complete sentence must have a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what action is taking place). Additionally, it should express a complete thought and be punctuated correctly.
A prefix is a group of letters added at the beginning of a word to change its meaning, such as adding "un-" to "happy" to make "unhappy".
I use full stops to mark the end of a sentence and capital letters at the beginning of a sentence to help distinguish the start of a new thought or idea. This follows standard writing conventions and improves readability for the user.
No, "spring term" does not need capital letters unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
No sentence can be made using those letters.
I cannot make a sentence with the letters cmpel. This is not a word this is letters.
Scary
a to z this letters form a one sentence
One sentence is "A gent, I ran."
Waiting For You
His letters became infrequent, then stopped completely
you add the letters ed at the end
Capital letters are used at the start of a sentence, or mainly used to make a certain part of a sentence STAND OUT.
"I have a sash" uses ten letters to make a complete sentence.
one sentence that pops into my head is. Her drawer is full of love letters that he wrote her.
Capital letters are used at the start of a sentence, or mainly used to make a certain part of a sentence STAND OUT.