He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
He did not like going to school.
Do you like your school uniform? Well, I guess some students don't.....( and so on for you to continue the essay).
Jesse is a bright student who does well in all areas of the school curriculum. Students who struggle in reading tend to have difficutlies across the entire curriculum.
A declarative statement is a sentence that makes a statement or expresses an idea. It is a simple sentence that provides information without asking a question or giving a command.
You can use it in many ways. Perhaps, "The teacher told us to be intraschool, while playing on the school grounds."
Control your thoughts. Along with education, acquire Educare
Today at school we had a easy teacher, school was simple.
An axle is a simple machine.orToday in school we learned about the simple machines and an axle was one of them.
A simple sentence uses a subject and a verb..
what a sentence for pubic school
Simple present - I walk to school. Simple past - I walked to school.
The simple predicate is: are interestedThe complete predicate is: are interested in school politics
The simple predicate of the sentence is "spoke." It is the main action that Mr. And Mrs. Kim performed in the sentence.
The simple predicate is: are interestedThe complete predicate is: are interested in school politics
The simple predicate is: are interestedThe complete predicate is: are interested in school politics
Ok - this is quite an easy one to remember. You use 'who' when the people that you are talking about are the object of your sentence and "whom' when they are the subject of your sentence. If you get confused, you can use a simple trick... If you can put HE or SHE in the place of who/whom, then you should use...WHO. Example: Bill, who was the boss of the company. He was the boss of the company. So, WHO is correct. If the sentence only makes sense with HIM or HER, then use WHOM. Example: John, whom she met at school. If you put HE in this type of sentence it looks silly...She met HE at school. So, it must be....She met HIM at school...so use WHOM.
Complex (APEX)
In that sentence, "graduates" is the simple subject because High School is describing them.