Active
This is done by active verbs.
Active verbs show who or what does the action expressed by the verb.It is the subject which does the action.
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make the subject-verb connection and then allow the sentence to paint a picture of the world surrounding that subject and verb
Active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject of a sentence receives the action. For example, "The cat chased the mouse" is in active voice, whereas "The mouse was chased by the cat" is in passive voice.
Atkt full form : allowed to keep term. ..it indicated that though you have failed in a subject but still your term want be wasted,,,they shall allow you to keep the term,,,they will grant you the consecutive term,,,
You can use "if you allow" to introduce a condition or concession in a sentence, such as "I could offer a different perspective, if you allow," or "I can explain further, if you allow me to do so." It is used to politely request permission to continue or contribute to a conversation.
My parents do not ALLOW her to go to my house.
yes
No external hammer to allow single action fire.
Receptors in the target cells allow hormonal action.
A sentence with no subject or verb is an incomplete sentence. That would be a sentence fragment.- - - - - - - - - - - - -A complete sentence requires a subject and that subject'spredicate, excluding any subject/predicate pairs that are part of a dependent clause.Sentence fragments often appear as short answers to questions, where the subject or predicate is already known. This is acceptable in speech but considered incorrect writing.Ex Q: "What are you doing?"Ex A: "Running home."The answer is a sentence fragment because it has no subject ("home" is an object; it's not what's doing the running).Ex Q: "What are your hobbies?"Ex A: "Hiking, boating, and watching people climb trees."The answer is a sentence fragment because it has no subject. Notice that it contains a complete subject-predicate pair ("people climb"), but that pair is part of an object clause.Ex Q: "Who keeps poking me in the back?"Ex A: "Stefan, with that pencil he just sharpened."The answer is a sentence fragment because it has no predicate. Again, there is a subject-predicate pair ("he sharpened") but that pair is part of a dependent clause.Special case: ImperativeMany languages allow the omission of a subject because the verb conjugation implies only one (or very few) matching pronouns. In English, that's not usually the case, except with commands. When you write a command, the subject "you" can be left out:Ex: "Stop goofing off!"The implied subject is 'you' and the predicate is 'stop'. This is a valid sentence.