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I don't know the answer to your question but your question is incorrect. You should have said "Can you give an example of a sentence that shows anxiety?" (I'm 11yrs old) Go back to school.
It may be, depending on the context. Commas are features of sentence structure, and there is no word or phrase in English that requires one. Use a comma before and in a list or when introducing a new clause.Complicated Answer:No, it isn't grammatically correct if you use a comma after the word 'and'. I will write a few examples of what I mean, putting the grammatically incorrect word like this "-example-".Incorrect sentence:"Hey, Karla, I'm going to the store today to get tomatoes -and,- lettuce -and,- bread."Correct sentence:"Hey, Karla, I'm going to get tomatoes, lettuce, and bread."There is also a type sentence that requires a comma before the word 'and', such as when the word 'and' is used to join two sentences together, which is called a compound sentence.Example:"Mary and Samantha arrived at the bus station before noon, and they left on the bus before I arrived. "In this case, the word and is being used as a conjunction, as in the other sentences it was not. A conjunction is a word the join two sentences together, forming a compound sentence.Two sentences:"I went to school today. So did John, even though he was sick."Compound sentence:"I went to school today, and so did John, even though he was sick."The list of conjunctions:And, but, or, yet, for, nor, so.Simple Answer:No.
Both are grammatically correct:school's is the possessive form of the singularnoun school;schools' is the possessive form of the pluralnoun schools.Examples:Our school's schedule is from 8:30 to 2:20.-- Singular, the schedule of one school.All of the schools' schedules are set by the board.-- Plural, the schedules of all the schools.
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
The sentence is a run-on and lacks proper punctuation to separate the clauses. To correct it, you could add a comma after "midnight" and a conjunction like "but" before "someone" to make it clearer and more grammatically correct.
The sentence 'A school housed in the church is doing well,' is grammatically correct.
No, it is not. There is not such thing as "use to". It is always "used to". (with a D). However, with that minor detail it would be. If you were to structure the sentence with the inverted order, it woul read: "That didn't used to be a school." That is a grammatically correct sentence/question.
Yo vengo means "I come" in English.
It is probably illegal to provide incorrect information.
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.
Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct. 'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.' 'How will you know if you passed it?' 'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
No that isn't grammatically correct. You should say 'Though George didn't like the school, he studied in the same school for ten years'
I don't know the answer to your question but your question is incorrect. You should have said "Can you give an example of a sentence that shows anxiety?" (I'm 11yrs old) Go back to school.
Create grammatically correct sentences!!
Quite simply, yes.
If you are a high school teacher, you should be able to write a grammatically correct complete sentence, which the above one, is not!
The word "unity" means that people have gathered together to get something done. An example of a sentence would be: "The people of the school came together in unity to celebrate the country's freedom".