It was hard to distinguish the twins when they wore the same outfit.
She heard whispering but could not distinguish what was said.
This person distinguished my heart. She had a distinguished look in her eye I was able to distinguish him by his hair.
You add a comma between the two parts of the compound sentence:I know you have it, just give it to me.The comma functions to distinguish the two distinct sentences. It could be written as two sentences:I know you have it. Just give it to me.Most compound sentences are joined by a conjunction, a comma will distinguish the two (or more) thoughts when no conjunction is present.Example: You had it but you gave it to me. (You had it. You gave it to me.)
Conversely, we could just meet at the mall.
Wait... do you mean meanless or meaningless? If it's meaningless, then... The sentence I just made is meaningless.
Mother I am going to distinguish this candle with water
Sometimes it is hard to distinguish fact from fiction.
Either... I know you have it ! Just give it to me ! OR I know you have it, just give it to me !
The question mark will distinguish a question from a sentence. How will you distinguish yourself in class today? People who are "color blind" cannot distinguish the color red from green.
you just put it in a sentence :)
Yes, I can give you a sentence with the word obituary. (I just did! ahahahaha)
You probably mean distinguish. He will distinguish himself on the team. You can distinguish the two animals by the length of their tails.
She heard whispering but could not distinguish what was said.
I can answer that in just a minute.
you just made a sentence. du!
"I give you" is actually three words, but here's a sentence. I give you two sentences instead of just one.
Here are some sentences.His hard work will distinguish him from the other employees.How will you distinguish Uncle Paul from the other clowns?