1. Those dogs' paws have mud all over them. (Plural possessive)
2. All the books' pages were all over the place. (Plural possessive)
The second sentence would be better with "were scattered around."
* Please ask only one sentence per question.
Those are pans
There are no sentences for this. Those are not words.
Students who do not write their own sentences should receive a smaller mark compared to those who do.
The sentence "Ben has done without a car for six months" contains three prepositions: "without," "for," and "with."
Those that are simple and direct.
And, or, but. Those are the most common.
Imperative sentences are sentences that gives command and requests while exclamatory sentences are those that expresses emotions and ends with an exclamation point.
It depends on what you are writing and the style in which you are writing. If you are doing technical writing or academic writing, then your style should be uniform throughout. Consistency and following conventions are the keys to success in those forms of writing. If you are writing fiction or prose for entertainment, then you will want to ensure that the structure of your sentences is grammatically correct, but you can vary the structures according to the impact you are trying to make. This is part of establishing your voice or style. Watch out for sentence fragments, run-on sentences, and sentences that don't have a consistent logic to them - these aren't appropriate no matter what you're writing. In a paragraph, all sentences should have a logical connection to each other and the subject of the paragraph. Please don't have sentence-paragraphs either; group sentences of a subject together. The answer to this question provides an example of good sentence and paragraph construction.
There are three sentences in those lines.
Time is a noun in the first sentence and a verb in the second one.
Both of those sentences are wrong, in using the singular verb "was" when the subejct of the sentence is plural and requires the plural verb "were".
Turn these sentences into plural.