Because you don't need to convert to a religion to know it isn't for you.
Yes, "Everyone had fun" is a complete sentence. It contains a subject ("Everyone") and a verb ("had"), expressing a complete thought.
everyone who still needs to complete the testing
Complete subject: Everyone in the church Complete predicate: rushed out into the freezing night air
'Everyone in our school' is the complete subject.Everyone in our school
People who are too cheap to work their way up the ranks and complete challenges by themselves like everyone else.
Anyone can discover this about themselves at any point in their life. Everyone is different and I would think by the time someone is in college they would already have figured it out.
Yes, since it has a subject, "Everyone," and a predicate, "had".
Everyone is in complete agreement.
The latter of the two, as "everyone" is a plural designation.
To keep themselves in power, they have to keep everyone else out. If everyone is elite, then no one is.
Because everyone has a responsibility for the safety of themselves and everyone else.
Themselves!