In this sense, work is a place. It falls into the noun category.
No. Salutations (hello, good morning, welcome, dear [Name]) are not capitalized unless some other rule (like the beginning of a sentence) requires their capitalization. For example: CORRECT: Good morning, Susan. CORRECT: I said good morning to John. CORRECT: Susan said, "Good morning, John." (The use of quotations makes this hello the beginning of a sentence spoken by Susan. Since a sentence always begins with a capital letter, hello is capitalized.) CORRECT: Susan said, "Tell John good morning for me." INCORRECT: I said Hello to John. INCORRECT: Good Morning, Susan. The reason these words tend to be incorrectly capitalized is their frequent use at the beginning of sentences. In reality, the only reason for their capitalization is to begin a sentence or a greeting in a letter. They should never be capitalized for emphasis or in the middle of a sentence out of habit. * The greeting in an email or letter counts as the beginning of a sentence. The first letter of the first word of a salutation would be capitalized: Good morning Susan, How are you today? ...
No 'Neither Bill or Susan say that the stove was working'
No, the word 'Susan' is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a person. A proper noun must be capitalized.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. For example:Susan is my sister. She is a student at the university. (The pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun 'Susan' in the second sentence.)
Susan was play on the wharf when she slipped and fell in the river
Him. The reason is that "he" is a subject pronoun. Since your masculine pronoun is not acting as the subject of the sentence, you would not use "he".Here is the difference in the same sentence:He and I had dinner with Susan. (Here, "He" is one of the subjects.)I had dinner with Susan and him. (Here, only "I" am doing the action, so I am the only subject.)
In this sentence, "work" is a noun serving as the object of the preposition "at." It refers to the place where Susan goes each morning.
3
No. Salutations (hello, good morning, welcome, dear [Name]) are not capitalized unless some other rule (like the beginning of a sentence) requires their capitalization. For example: CORRECT: Good morning, Susan. CORRECT: I said good morning to John. CORRECT: Susan said, "Good morning, John." (The use of quotations makes this hello the beginning of a sentence spoken by Susan. Since a sentence always begins with a capital letter, hello is capitalized.) CORRECT: Susan said, "Tell John good morning for me." INCORRECT: I said Hello to John. INCORRECT: Good Morning, Susan. The reason these words tend to be incorrectly capitalized is their frequent use at the beginning of sentences. In reality, the only reason for their capitalization is to begin a sentence or a greeting in a letter. They should never be capitalized for emphasis or in the middle of a sentence out of habit. * The greeting in an email or letter counts as the beginning of a sentence. The first letter of the first word of a salutation would be capitalized: Good morning Susan, How are you today? ...
the susan b anthony speech is about the presidental election and she had a chance to tell the world that wmen and men can vote so it can all be even
1853
Susan is a proper noun, which is a type of noun that refers to a specific person, place, or thing.
Subject of the sentence: Susan Verb: passed Direct Object: a note Indirect Object: you
In the book Stargirl, Susan's speech "I thought I heard a Moa" was not the speech she had been practicing for weeks. When she was up on stage, she forgot her old speech and replaced it with this one, although it's mentioned there were elements of the old speech in it. The creation of Star People was not mentioned
Susan was desparate for some attention so after the contest she changed back to stargirl
The future tense of the sentence "Susan sings beautifully" is "Susan will sing beautifully."
Are you speaking about the Declaration of Sentiments? If so then it was presented at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 in Seneca Falls, NY.
by having the audience focus on the central purpose of the speech