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Yes the word though can go at the beginning of a sentence. Though he didn't know the answer on the test, he still made an educated guess.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
Yes, it's still a conjunction, and it's grammatically incorrect to begin a sentence with a conjunction. Of course, people do it all the time, but if you're writing a formal paper, don't do it.
Yes it is a transition but it is still an adverb bcuz it ends in ly
when serving on a ministry and you going through a transition do you still servre on that ministry?
Yes, from can be a preposition. Usually, if you can remove a prepositional phrase from a sentence and it still makes sense, then the beginning word is a preposition.
An incipient population is still small but beginning to reproduce and become established. or His incipient behavior is a sign of things to come.
Notwithstanding the rain, I went for a walk. (Preposition, meaning 'in spite of'.) Notwithstanding, I still think you were wrong. (Adverb, meaning 'nevertheless'.)
Well, active voice is when the subject of the sentence is directly stated to be doing the action. Like, "the lightning struck the tree" is active voice because the lightning is the subject and is at the beginning of the sentence and followed directly by the verb struck. Passive voice (the opposite) of this sentence would be "the tree was struck by lightning" lightning is still the subject and still doing the verb, struck, but it is not at the beginning of the sentence and directly followed by the verb. So maybe the active voice verb is the verb that the active subject is performing?
Well, active voice is when the subject of the sentence is directly stated to be doing the action. Like, "the lightning struck the tree" is active voice because the lightning is the subject and is at the beginning of the sentence and followed directly by the verb struck. Passive voice (the opposite) of this sentence would be "the tree was struck by lightning" lightning is still the subject and still doing the verb, struck, but it is not at the beginning of the sentence and directly followed by the verb. So maybe the active voice verb is the verb that the active subject is performing?
Kinda.
Still is a verb in that sentence.