Nor mum or dad could see the big anniversary present yet
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.
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Yes. 'Thus' is another word for 'therefore'. Thus the sentence you start of with 'thus' should be an explanatory sentence.
yes, it looks good to me.
it is a sentence when you start a sentence with 3 words what end in ed
I am not happy nor am I unhappy.
An example of using nor in a sentence would be: " They had neither fish nor cheese at the party." It usually has to be paired with neither to work properly in a sentence. Nor goes with neither. Or goes with either. The color, gray, is neither black nor white. I prefer either gray or black for lettering.
To capitalize the sentence correctly, it should start with a capital letter and capitalize the proper nouns such as "Hazels" and "Florist." The revised sentence would be: "Neither the dog nor the cats were frightened by the delivery truck from Hazel's Florist."
Neither you nor your brother have offended me.
No, the correct sentence is: "Neither he nor you is going to the party." In this case, "is" should be used because neither "he" nor "you" is singular.
That is not a full sentence nor do you know who "she" is.
When almost every word in a sentence starts with the same letter,it is called alliteration EXAMPLE; never navigate nor net new born fish
pro-slavery doesn't have just one sentence, nor can it own 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.
I don't like neither apple nor orange.
Yes, I can start a sentence with "Is."
Neither my mother nor my father came to the school to collect me. Its called a compound sentence with a compound subject