Though starting a sentence with And was once frowned up on, it has become accepted due to common usage.
You did a proper job of it.
use it in a sentence
It's perfectly fine to start a sentence with likewise, just make sure you have a comma after it.
The simple predicate of the sentence "Many English folktales start with the words Once Upon a Time" is "start." The simple predicate refers to the main verb or action of the sentence, which in this case indicates what the subject (Many English folktales) does.
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.
You did a proper job of it.
Yes.
Yes, it is proper English to start a sentence with the word "oh." This interjection can be used at the beginning of a sentence to express a range of emotions or to call attention to something specific.
yeah that's a proper sentence
No
NO
you can start a senetence with or but it wont be proper grammer.
Yes, sure.
use it in a sentence
No that would not be proper English. Best by itself in a sentence is correct.
No, "Is what" is not a complete sentence in proper English. It is grammatically incorrect and lacks subject-verb agreement. It needs additional context or words to form a complete and coherent sentence.
It's perfectly fine to start a sentence with likewise, just make sure you have a comma after it.