Yes. Drab is a word meaning dull and lifeless.
Why would such a beautiful girl wear such drab colors every day?
Tired of the drab gray walls, she repainted them a bright shade of yellow.
Military uniforms are often drab shades of brown and green so that soldiers blend in easily with the environment.
drab drabber drabbest
The word because is perfectly acceptable at the beginning of an English sentence, and indeed there is no word in English that may not begin a sentence. A format that forbids because or any other English word from beginning an English sentence is irretrievably faulty.
(This is not a word in the English language.)
drabber, drabbest
Here is an English sentence with the word log: Annie needs to go outside and get a log for the fireplace.One English sentence with the word log is: The boys sat on a log while they fished at the river.
Don't be a drab just be a queen.
A drab addition to the posthumous romantic comedy genre.
In that sentence, the word very modifies the adjective drab, therefore very is an adverb.
* There is no English word with the spelling surride.
drab drabber drabbest
The African Luhya word for the English word 'sentence' is "isendensi".
Their ignorance of the English language was bewildering.
This place used to be so colourful, but now they have painted it all the same colour it is drab and monochromatic.
It would be useful if we could eradicate people's poor English
No, because the spelling "farmery" is not a word in the English language.
"Ara" is not an English word. I would be happy to help you translate a suitable sentence if I knew what language it was.
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.