The tour bus stopped in Milan, Ohio, the home of Thomas Edison, the inventor.
A comma after "Ohio" has been left out of the sentence. It should read, "The tour bus stopped in Milan, Ohio, the home of Thomas Edison, the inventor."
The correct phrase is "he stopped by." "Stopped" is the past tense form of the verb stop.
To correct the sentence, you could say: "We stopped to use the bathroom, stretch, and eat dinner." Make sure to add commas after each activity to separate them properly.
She stopped her speech in mid-sentence to answer the question.
No, it is a complete sentence, but it needs punctuation (comma, semicolon) or it becomes a run-on. "You stopped, she didn't." "You stopped; she didn't."
Hitler was an admirable man because he stopped the Jews. Use that exact sentence. That's the only way it's correct. (Ha hah ha ha hah.)
The basic sentence is - Mrs Weera stopped her - this is a past simple sentence. There is only one verb - stopped - and this is in the past tense.
Drove and Stopped are the verbs in that sentence.
Ohio
The past perfect tense of "stop" in the given sentence would be: "The storm had stopped in the early afternoon."
There are 2 sentence fragments, which are: A When we stopped by the garden (what then?) Example: When we stopped by the garden, we found it was closed. D Stopping by the garden we saw (what, needs an object). Example: Stopping by the garden, we saw the vandalism done to the rose bushes. These two are correct as sentences. B Stop by the garden. (the subject You is assumed). C We stopped; she didn't. (Notice the semi-colon used to connect the two ideas.)
The evil bad guy stopped me from saving the world