answersLogoWhite

0

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is the adverb in the sentence if they failed the mother herself forced it down and pinned it to the ground?

down


What country when its name is broke down is a complete sentence?

Antarctica


What countries name when broken down makes a complete sentence?

love it


What countries name can be broken down to make a complete sentence?

Turkey.


How do you use precast in a sentence?

I watched the builders put down precast on the ground.


What is the different between a sentence and a fragment?

A sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb.A sentence fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.The above are sentences.Here are some fragments that make no sense:the sentence fragment?what is?your answer in a complete sentencethe boy who lived down the streetbecause he had to go home


What is a sentence with the word parapets?

She slid down the roof, but was stopped by the parapet and did not fall to the ground.


Does sit down and hear make a sentence?

"Sit down and hear" is a sentence fragment, as it lacks a subject and a main verb. To make it a complete sentence, you could add a subject and a verb, such as "Please sit down and hear the presentation."


When can you use Verbs at the end of a sentence?

Verbs don't come at the end of a complete sentence. If you have a command like -- Sit down! -- then this sentence consists of a verb only.


What does this translate to in english ko tsu chi ni ten ga tsutano ni こつちに転がったのに and which if anything are particles in the sentence?

Well what you wrote in Japanese and how you wrote it in English are two different things! 転がった reads (korogatta) and here it could mean both 'fell down' and 'lay down' (past tense of lie down). Tsuchi means 'earth, ground, soil' but 'kotsuchi' is a name and doesn't normally fit in the sentence here. (I take it you meant tsuchi ni korogatta no ni.) Overall it means "Even though (I/he/she..) fell down on/lay down on the ground.." If you're sure 'Kotsuchi' is what you need, just replace the name with the word 'ground' in the sentence As for particles に (in, at , on, to etc) and のに (even though, and yet, in spite, despite the fact that.., etc) are the two particles in this sentence.


What part of speech is the word down in the sentence after seeing that much snow on the ground yves wanted to get down to work?

Down is a preposition BUT in this sentence it is part of the phrasal verb -- get down.Sometimes a preposition in a phrasal verb is called a particle


Is ate them down by the river a sentence?

It's not a complete sentence. It might be okay in a casual conversation where both speakers know what the subject and object of the sentence are: "What did John do with those fish?" "[John] Ate them ["those fish"] down by the river."