Where we're going is where we once were.
Where were the items we're looking for last?
We're right where we were ten minutes ago!
deliberately does not tell the whole truth.
A Concluding Sentence is the last sentence of a paragraph(s), it summarizes everything that you just wrote about and it is somewhat like your Introduction Sentence. Usually, your concluding sentence will say something like "In conclusion," or "Therefore," or "To summarize." Basically, when writing a formal paper, you have three steps -- "Tell them what you're going to tell them" (the Introduction), "Tell them" (the Body), and "Tell them what you just told them" (the Conclusion).
Subject: (After a slow beginning) the farmerharvested the whole crop (in one week).So the rest is going to be the predicate or the predicate is:harvested the whole crop in one week
Yes. To know which one your talking about you have to read the whole sentence. And guess which one to use. :)
No tell is not a adjective. Adjectives describe something in a sentence.
The topic sentence "tells them what you're going to tell them." It's an overview of the whole paper, so it's one of the most important parts.
There is a few different websites that can tell you some whole sentences. Writing a whole sentence is simple.
the people in the court room swore to tell the whole truth.
"This sentence is dedicated to the one who asked for it."
Yes, it can be said is a command sentence. Tell me is the phrase that is making it a command one.
deliberately does not tell the whole truth.
How can you tell if an equal share is more than one whole?Use an example from above to explain your answers.
"In Paris, you view the whole city from this one lovely terrace." Is a sentence using terrace.
whole crop harvested in one week
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
In one sentence tell us what is the most important thing about yourself.
I can kill you, but I can also heal you