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If you press home, the line showing where your text will go goes to the beginning of the line. I don't know if anything makes it go to the beginning of a sentence, and if you're trying to make the mouse go there, I don't know that either.
"Who" is the subject of the sentence, and "called" is the verb. The subject goes on a horizontal line and the verb goes on the same horizontal line after the subject. Draw a vertical line between the two, and you have a sentence diagram! http://www.english-grammar-revolution.com/interrogative-sentence.html This link has other interrogative sentences and diagrams of them. :)
The use of the same sound at the beginning of each word in a line or a sentence.
Who is the woman in the dress ? I would put the line between woman and in to separate the complete subject and complete predicate.
At the beginning of the subject line only
It is such an aggravation when people answer questions incorrectly or improperly.
Words given first to introduce the subject to the listener or reader. A line to focus the mind on the subject in hand
No. A geometric line has no beginning or end. A ray has a beginning, but no end. A line segment has both a beginning and an end.
No A line segment has a beginning and an end, but a line has no beginning or end. A ray has a beginning but no end.
A diagram that shows the structure of a sentence is called a syntax tree or a sentence diagram. This type of diagram visually represents the relationships between words in a sentence, including parts of speech, phrasing, and dependencies.
The floodwaters began to recede, revealing the damage left behind.
In the Beginning... Was the Command Line was created in 1999.