Yes.
Seemingly, the puppy's reserves of energy were boundless.
An example of a sentence beginning with our: Our grandmother died in prison.
I can't imagine using it at the start of a sentence. I'd move it to later in the sentence.
they are just there to help you start off or end a sentence
No, you cannot start a sentence with "no" unless you need to do so. No reason exists not to start a sentence with that word, as you can see. No one will care if you do start a sentence with it.
im not sure where to start
The minority party scored a real coup with this seemingly insignificant win.
can you start a sentence using the word phishing?
start it out with the
Seemingly out of nowhere, Ralph asked the one question I did not want to answer.
Inexhaustible is a synonym of "limitless," with regards to items and supplies. An example of a sentence using the word "inexhaustible" is "The Roman army's supply of salt was seemingly inexhaustible. "
nope nope
An example of a sentence beginning with our: Our grandmother died in prison.
I can't imagine using it at the start of a sentence. I'd move it to later in the sentence.
Yep. There's no problem with using 'an' anywhere you want to. You shouldn't use and at the start of a sentence, though.
"Start the test now" said john
it IS physically possible, but not grammatically correct.
That you have asked this question is perfectly reasonable.