write sentence of assessment
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'hero' is he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object in a sentence.
No, the word "hero" does not need to be capitalized in the sentence "The tall tale hero John Henry is an American hero." In this context, "hero" is used as a common noun rather than a proper noun. Only proper nouns, such as names or titles, should be capitalized.
The phrase "The adventure of the hero" is not a sentence, there is no verb. The phrase is a noun phrase, any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition.There is no possessive noun in "The adventure of the hero".The possessive form of the noun phrase is "The hero's adventure".
how do you write a sentence with the word inertia in it?(see its a sentence)lol:) Forget tht^^ interia is a force. Theres your sentence
By saying: The hero rose victorious from his battle.
Yes.Example: Josh pretended to be a hero, but he was actually planning to betray his comrades.
You show me a hero,and i will write you a tragedy.......You=S show=V Me=IO A hero=DO , and I=S will write=V you=IO a tragedy=DO.
The nouns in the sentence are hero, life, and line.
First you write a bit of the sentence then you write pakistan and then you write the last bit of the sentence. simple
write sentence of assessment
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose is the national hero of India.
i write the same sentence
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'hero' is he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object in a sentence.
The subject of the sentence is "Whoever" ... since "whoever" is doing the actions (EATING the hamster and BEING the hero).
can you write a sentence using the wordFragmentary
You can't write a sentence that is not a sentence, it is either a sentence or it is not. You can write a sentence that doesn't look like a sentence. For example, "Stop!"; although one word, it is a complete sentence. The subject 'you' is implied, the verb is 'stop', which makes it a complete sentence.