It depends on the foreign word.
The sentence should begin with the definite article 'the.
No. A compound subject takes a plural form of the verb. Change is to are. In addition, the definite article " the " should be used with " beat ". Without it, the English is not smooth, but awkward.
Foreign should only be capitalized if it forms part of a title or if it's at the beginning of a sentence.
The metadata should include an abstract of the article.
It depends on the context. Generally, if the second proper noun is an integral part of the first one (e.g., "the New York Times"), then you would use the definite article. If they are separate entities being combined (e.g. "Toyota Camry"), you might not need to use the definite article.
There is no definite answer to this question. However, most linguists and authors believe that no abbreviations should be used in a sentence. They are used for note-taking, or as headings for letters or compositions. no they should not be abbreviated no they should not be abbreviated
No, it should be, 'Someone brought you an article about the CEO.' (or '...an article from theCEO.'). That is, assuming that CEO is the chief executive officer, a person.
No, it is not correct.You should have an article - a or the - before "teacher."
Read it. Read it again. Try to understand what the author is saying. See if you can summarize that idea in one sentence - if you've understood the article, you should be able to summarize it. If you've understood the article correctly, your summary should encapsulate the premise of the article.
To properly cite an article name in an essay, you should include the author's last name and the publication year in parentheses after the sentence where you mention the article. Additionally, you should include the article title in quotation marks and the name of the publication in italics.
You should capitalize the sentence as: "Did you read the article about Lance Armstrong in the April issue of Sports Illustrated?"
Article titles should be formatted in APA guidelines by using sentence case, which means only the first word and proper nouns are capitalized. The title should be in italics and end with a period.