The sentence with a helping verb is 'c'. The helping verb in the sentence is had and the main verb is rested. Some helping verbs are has, be, was, were, did, and might. Helping verbs are verbs that are in front of a main verb.
"She had rested on the dock" contains the helping verb "had".
"She had rested on the dock" contains a helping verb (had is helping the verb rested complete the verb phrase). This is in the past perfect tense.
'She had rested on the dock.' is the sentence that has a helping verb. Rested is the verb and had is the helping verb.
Neither sentence contains a helping verb. Swam and paddled are verbs, but they are not helping verbs.
The sentence she had rested on the dock has a helping verb. In the sentence, had is working as a helping verb.
Helping verbs are verbs that are used to augment the main verb in a sentence. In the sentence, 'She swam across the lake,' there is no helping verb, only the main verb, 'swam.'
Here are some sentences with the word entice: I will attempt to entice you to do your homework. The chocolate cake seemed to entice her from across the room, saying "Eat me. EAT ME!"
She deftly tied her shoes.He deftly deboned the fish.
A transition sentence is a sentence that is very obvious to the writer. It is important to have transition sentences so that your readers will know exactly what you are trying to get across.
The child's incessant crying kept us from hearing the sermon.Mom's incessant nagging did nothing to improve his behavior.Incessant yelling from across the hall kept us awake all night.
Grammar is also important for students.Why are complete sentences important for students?Because if you want to write a technical or academic document that conveys your thoughts ideas etc accurately and people can read and understand what you are writing then you need to write in complete sentences.
The nouns in the sentences are in bold:She swam across the lake.Her brother paddled the canoe.She rested on the deck.He went home late.
The rabbit jumped on the turtle and he paddled across the ocean
The two conditions that stayed the same was the distance and weather.
No. "Across" is a preposition.
you call that an acrostic poem/sentences.
Example sentences for the third person, objective, personal pronoun her:My mom likes violets so I picked some for her.The doctor said to call her if the problem returns.Example sentences for the possessive adjective her:Lucy brought her brother to the picnic.Her bicycle has a flat tire.Example sentences for the possessive pronoun hers:The car that was hit was not hers.Hers is the car parked across the street.
No. Sentences shouldn't end in prepositions. "Across" is a preposition.
Across is the correct spelling of the word.Some example sentences are:He stared at her from across the room.We walked across the bridge.She drew the curtains across her window.
You can aggregate the statistics across the whole class.
one or two, or as many as it takes to get your point across
We rented a huge van to haul our belongings across the country.
That would be a good "deed."