A police-officer asks an eyewitness: "Since you eye witnessed the robber, could you please describe him for me?" The eyewitness replies: "You know, he was tall, kinda short and, you know, dark and light skinned - Let me think, and you know, He - he looked like a man." This description has absolutely no substance, as it does not give the police officer any additional information, clue or evidence about the robbers' figure. Thus, this reply could be considered to be a vague sentence. I hope that I was helpful =D
A "run-on sentence" is one that contains more than one separate thought without any coordinating or subordinating words (conjunctions) to connect them.
1) This is a run-on sentence:
"The girl was late for school her teacher did not like tardy students."
(Corrected - The girl was late for school, and her teacher did not like tardy students.)
2) This is a run-on sentence:
"The meteor blasted a crater into the ground it was moving very fast."
(Corrected - The meteor blasted a crater into the groundbecause it was moving very fast.
3) This is not a run-on sentence, despite its length. (There are 6 conjunctions.)
"One day, the sun came up, and then the dew evaporated from the grass, and the birds started to sing, and the day began on the farm, where the cows graze and are brought in twice a day for milking; that is, after the barn has been cleaned." Sometimes it is easy to have a run-on sentence. An example of a run-on sentence is, the boy loved singing he could sing all day. These are two sentences that can be corrected by using a period.
A run-on sentence occurs when two separate sentences are joined without any form
of punctuation, or any sort of word connecting them.
For example:
1. The computer is a useful tool it can be used for writing papers.
2. My mother says I can go first I have to empty the garbage, though.
3. Once a time there was a man his name was Josh.
4. Bees don't eat flowers they gather nectar from them then they go back to the
hive.
5. I heard the tires squeal then the car came around the corner I got out of the way
fast.
A sentence that does not end with the completion of its main clause, but continues with one or more subordinate clauses or other modifiers.
That little girls shoe laces is very loose.
Because she was such a good actress, she tried out for the play and now she has the lead role as Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz.
i need a example of loose sentence???
The horse is loose in the field.
The Federalist Party of Early America favored a loose interpretation of the Constitution.
Collards are a type of cabbage that keeps a loose head of leaves. A sentence that uses collards would be, "For dinner, they had a hearty dinner of collard greens and ham."
Despite dieting and wearing loose clothing, it's difficult for him to hide his paunchy middle.
An earthquake causes loose rock to tumble downward into a jumble of stone debris .
since tirade means to rant, to let loose all anger, a sentence u might use with this word might be like this: He went into a tirade because he could not restrain himself.
The Supreme Court used a loose construction approach when interpreting the Constitution to uphold a law that was not explicitly outlined in the document.
I think we have a screw loose on the swing.You have a screw loose in your head.
Man i thin your pant is loose
periodic sentence and loose or cumulative sentence
No, a cumulative sentence and a loose sentence are not the same. A cumulative sentence is a sentence that starts with an independent clause and is followed by a series of subordinate clauses or phrases that provide additional information. A loose sentence, on the other hand, is a sentence in which the main idea is stated first, followed by phrases or clauses that provide further details or examples.
My belt is too loose, I have to tighten it.
She tends to loosely hold onto things, making it easy for her to lose track of them.
The little girl has a loose tooth. The doorknob is loose and does not latch correctly. There's a lion loose in the area.
Literally:Can you cut loose the state of Florida with a saw?
One way to use "loose" and "lose" in the same sentence is: "Be careful not to lose the keychain that has a loose connection."
"Loose" is an adjective describing something not tight or securely fixed, like "Her shoelaces are loose." "Lose" is a verb indicating the act of failing to win or misplacing something, such as "Don't lose your keys."
I was afraid that the key would not work because it was such a loose fit in the lock.