Providence, Rhode Island,
He arrived with dignity. He arrived, this time with dignity. He arrived, it was with dignity.
arrived
(A+) the sentence is (or should be) "Has my brother arrived yet?" the verb phrase is "has arrived"
Arrived. Example sentence: He arrived twenty minutes late to the party.
In the sentence "a letter from grandma and her arrived today," the word "her" functions as a pronoun referring to a female person. It is used in conjunction with "a letter from grandma," indicating that both the letter and the person referred to by "her" arrived together. The structure suggests that "her" might be the subject of another action or context not fully detailed in the sentence.
The sentence segment containing a punctuation error is "Providence Rhode Island," which should include commas to separate the city and state: "Providence, Rhode Island." Additionally, the date should also have commas: "April 5, 1995." Therefore, the corrected sentence would be: "We arrived in Providence, Rhode Island, on April 5, 1995, at 4:30 a.m."
The package from your Japan office arrived yesterday. It contains the documents you need.
we, arrived
The common grammatical error in the sentence is the lack of punctuation. It needs a comma after "quickly" to separate the two independent clauses correctly. The corrected sentence would be: "Jessica left the farm quickly, and she arrived at the school an hour later."
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the given sentence "Has your brother arrived yet".
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the sentence.
theyhad arrived just before the meeting started.
He arrived with dignity. He arrived, this time with dignity. He arrived, it was with dignity.
Yes the verb was in the sentence it is arrived, the past tense of arrive
arrived
We voted before conrad arrived.
The adverb in the sentence is "late," modifying the verb "arrived." It describes the manner in which the students arrived.