Bob enjoys playing football, and Jim enjoys playing hockey. This sentence could also be written with a semicolon instead of a comma. Bob enjoys playing football; Jim enjoys playing hockey.
Bob enjoys playing football, and Jim enjoys playing hockey. The comma is placed before "and" because the parts of the sentence before and after it can stand by themselves as independent clauses.
action verb is also called a 'doing verb' and they describe what someone, say 'bob', is doing.ex. Bob is playing with his friends.playing is describing what bob is doing, so it is an action verb
The gazette published last week's football scores. After earning his degree in journalism, he took a job with a small upstate gazette.
It would depend on the sentence. Use "He and Bob" any place you would use "he" and "Him and Bob" any place you would use Him... Examples: "He and Bob went to the store." "I gave it to Him and Bob." Although it is more common to say the name before the pronoun, as in "Bob and him".
You have it spelled correctly for bob as in bobbing for apples or having your hair cut in a bob, etc. Bob.
Bob enjoys playing football, and Jim enjoys playing hockey. The comma is placed before "and" because the parts of the sentence before and after it can stand by themselves as independent clauses.
Singing and playing football(soccer)
Bob Blackburn - ice hockey - was born in 1938.
Bob Davie - ice hockey - was born in 1912.
Bob Davie - ice hockey - died in 1990.
Bob Cunningham - ice hockey - was born in 1941.
Bob Boucher - ice hockey - was born in 1938.
Bob Boucher - ice hockey - died in 2004.
Bob Taylor - ice hockey - was born in 1904.
Bob Taylor - ice hockey - died in 1993.
Bob Craig - ice hockey - was born in 1952.
Bob Russell - ice hockey - was born in 1955.