I have an uncle to live in london from the grammatical point of view is;
1. it doesn't sound right
2. it sounds like he isn't living in London yet when you say "to live"
Domestic violence affects 1 in 4 women at some point in their adult lives.
Use the same grammatical pattern
All subpoints of a particular point have the same grammatical characteristics
Yes, it is correct. Here is an example using this prepositional phrase: "James made the point that he had never mentioned his source's name in the letter."
A topic sentence and a transitional sentence are not related. A transitional sentence moves the reader from point to point, each which supports the main argument or topic sentence.
No
when something has a exclemation point in the sentence
Yes. For example, "RUN! RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!" The example has an exclamation point at the end of the one-word sentence, "Run!"
i like point of views
Walworth road
Departure point: London, United KingdomDestination point: SingaporeEstimated flight duration: 13 hours, 29 minutes
Departure point: BrazilDestination point: London, United KingdomEstimated flight duration: 10 hours, 56 minutes