series
should be
You almost NEVER do. 1) The circuit should be off and/or disconnected when using an ohmmeter. 2) It should be in parallel with the component as far as the rest of the circuit is concerned, but alone in series with the device its measuring.
ammeter
The simplist answers is that electricity needs to complete a circuit fully. It stops flowing because there is no complete circuit. The switch is a device for opening and closing the circuit. When the switch is in the off position the circuit is said to be open and electricity cannot flow.
No it is not a complete sentence on its own. It is because there should be something before Therefore.
The complete verb in this sentence is "should have been running."
Yes, the sentence "She does not always complete her homework" is correct.
The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
i should leave now
The sentence is "Shelly should have been more careful on the path." The complete linking verb is "should have been."
Using the word "then" at the beginning of a sentence is not incorrect. However, it does not make a sentence complete. A complete sentence must have, at a minimum, a subject and a verb. "Then" is neither of those.
No, the given text is not a complete sentence because it is missing the subject. A complete sentence would be "You should make an outline for your essay because it is a helpful way to organize your ideas."
Yes it is.
Someone should answer it!
When two complete sentences are in one complete paragraph; does that mean each sentence is a SEPARATE topic? Or is each separate sentence part of the SAME topic?
No, it's a complete sentence. It has a subject, it has a verb, and it makes sense all by itself. A fragment is just a part of a sentence, but it doesn't make any sense by itself. If I say "The motor is on fire," that makes perfect sense, and someone should put out the fire quickly!