No the word introductory is not a noun. It is an adjective.
Greek myth is the subject and glance is the verb Answer 2 But glance is really the subject of the sentence. 'According to Greek myth' is just an introductory clause. The sentence says 'a glance', not 'to glance'. Therefore glance is a noun, not a verb. The verb is 'turn'.
an introductory element is something when you put a comma
Before the curtain fell, the actors bowed.
introductory paragraph.
Commas
yes it might be.
When ''It" is used as an introductory subject,singular verb is used always for example It is these boys that came late.
i do not know when the flagpole was painted.
A main clause typically follows an introductory phrase or clause. The main clause contains the main subject and verb of the sentence and provides the primary information or action.
Greek myth is the subject and glance is the verb Answer 2 But glance is really the subject of the sentence. 'According to Greek myth' is just an introductory clause. The sentence says 'a glance', not 'to glance'. Therefore glance is a noun, not a verb. The verb is 'turn'.
change it..!! you need to change the quotation mark to perform a sentence,you also need to change the verb into past tense or past participle whether the sentence have a said introductory sentence..the helping verbs in the quoted part are changed to when the introductory verb is in the past tense:will-would,shall-should,must-had to,has/have-had,may-might,and can-could.change the present tense-past tense,past tense-past participle,present progressive-past progressive. when the quoted part explains general truth it remains in the present tense. when the introductory verb is in the present tense the quoted part also remains as it is like in the direct discourse.take note:that you need to add or insert the word that after the introductory verb when changing to indirect. the adverb and adjective remain unchange when it is said at the same time and at the same place,but changed when it is said at another time and place.
an introductory element is something when you put a comma
The sentence "She sings beautifully when she is happy" contains an adverb ("beautifully") that describes the verb "sings" in the noun clause "when she is happy."
kinds of introductory paragraph
There are 4 syllables in the word introductory.
Actively worded sentences have a format of noun - verb. Sometimes it is harder to locate the noun - verb when the sentence has clauses. Sally argued with her mother. noun Sally verb argued After being yelled at by her father, Sally and her mother argued. nouns: Sally and her mother verb argued introductory clause: After being yelled at by her father... On the way to school, three blocks before the park, Sally found Mrs. Rutherford's purse sitting on a bench at the bus stop. noun Sally verb found Just before the bell rang for first period classes, John impulsively skipped school. noun John verb skipped adverb impulsively object school rest introductory clause
In certain circumstances you can.You should not use a comma to separate a verb from its object, but if there is (for example) a list or an intervening phrase that requires a comma, then it could happen that a comma will follow a verb.For example:Yesterday I bathed, shaved, and excercised.She ate, as far as anyone in the audience could determine, twenty hot dogs.But the following would be WRONG:She ate, twenty hot dogs.Yesterday I bathed, the dog.