Your question was one. Here are some others:
The sentence "The baby cried" is a complete sentence because it has a subject (the baby) and a verb (cried) and expresses a complete thought.
This sentence can be complete as: After a congruence transformation the area of a triangle would be the same as it was before.
Complete sentences are a sentence with a complete thought, statement, etc. Ex: He says he will help me on my homework. (this is a complete sentence) An incomplete sentence would be: He says he. (you did not complete the thought.)
Please complete your sentence.
No, it would be considered a fragment.
Would you please construct a complete sentence?
A complete sentence has a subject and a predicate, the subject is this case would be the person who attended Yale which is missing so the sentence isn't really complete its more in point form.
No, the sentence "i wants to go here" is not complete because it is missing the verb "want" in the correct form. A correct and complete sentence would be "I want to go here."
a sentence is a complete thought to have a complete sentence you need a subject and verb "In its earliest forms" would be a prepositional phrase a transition sentence is a sentence that transitions between paragraphs or ideas
They certainly would.
"Is Marcus one of the greatest quarterbacks in our school history?" would be a complete sentence.
The complete predicate would be 'would like' because it is the complete verb clause.