The cause is the water boiling. The effect is the kettle whistling.
The subordinate clause in your sentence begins with the word before.
A topic sentence!
it depends what word it is it could be any part of speech depending on the sentence
Restaurant is not capitalized, unless it begins the sentence.
To begin is the verb
regular speech
In formal writing you would not begin a sentence with because, therefore, the kind of sentence that begins with because is informal.
Mothers Day is always the second Sunday of the month of May.
no because then it would be a sentence fragment.
if the word after it begins in a vowel
The sentence technique modeled in the eResource is called sentence variety. This involves changing the way a sentence begins in order to create interest and rhythm in writing.
No, "line manager" is not capitalized when used in a sentence unless it begins the sentence.
When an adverb begins a sentence, it should be followed by a comma to separate it from the rest of the sentence's information. This helps to clarify the role of the adverb in modifying the verb or adjective that follows.
You could have a sentence like: Of the following choices, which would you prefer?
A directly quoted sentence begins with quotation marks (" ").
'Until the class begins' is not a complete sentence, and therefore it can not be classified. It is a clause, introduced by the conjunction 'until.' 'Until the class begins' is not a complete thought. We're still waiting for the rest of the sentence. Something will or will not happen, take place, be allowed, etc., 'until the class begins.' Without that something being stated, there is not a complete thought. It takes a complete thought to make a sentence. 'The class begins' is a complete sentence. It sounds like an announcement of some kind. It is perhaps a little awkward or stilted, but it is a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought. Furthermore, it is a declarative sentence. It states a fact.
Only if it begins a sentence.