Nice, pleasant, heart-warming, dreadful, and frightful are words that could replace great in the example sentence provided above.
Following the war, the country was in great turmoil. Turmoil is a noun meaning a state of agitation or confusion.
Akbar is not a word to be used in a sentence but instead is a name used in the Middle East. The Mogul Emperor of India from 1556 to 1605 was knows as "Akbar the Great".
What is the purpose of the following sentence?I think it would be best to study the problem carefully.
You could have a sentence like: Of the following choices, which would you prefer?
The knowledge that there would be fresh cookies at home was a great enticement for the college student to come home immediately following final exams.
I would not to like to see this sentence in a student's paper. Instead of starting a sentence with a pronoun, name the person. Use the following as an example: Marcus is so short that he cannot reach the basin.
The grammar depends on the meaning of the sentence. If it is talking about the future, it would be, 'This will be a great adventure'. If it is talking about something that has already happened, it would be, 'This would have been a great adventure.'
Joyce Carol Oates said it best: "The first sentence can't be written until the final sentence is written."Worry about finishing your story, not about writing the perfect opening sentence! You can change anything you like once you've finished -- go back and think of a great first sentence then, instead of waiting for some magical "first sentence" to fall out of the sky and hit you in the head.You're going to have to write your own story if you're going to be a writer -- what do you think would happen in the dark room? What would a scientist have in his rooms? What would the hero or heroine do after following the evil person?Now get off the internet and get back to writing that story!
"In lieu" means in place of or instead of. The sentence would read, " Instead of a babysitter...."
the best following sentence would be i have many ambtions before and the are.....
If you mean "Is the following sentence a declarative, interrogative, or exclamatory sentence, 'He huffed and he puffed and he blew the house down!' ?" Then it would be an exclamatory sentence.
The sentence would be: My father's eighth grade teacher taught him a great deal more than math.