A. I went home and ate and ate.
B. Before lunch, I played volleyball; after lunch I did again.
C. I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right.
D. You and I and the whole team will go.
Madeline couldn't believe her eyes, the fireworks were so beautiful.
Can't see the following sentence anywhere
You should not capitalize a sentence fragment following a colon.
was
There is no direct object in this sentence.
The nouns in the sentence are Jody and ball.
To fix the run-on sentence, you can separate it into two sentences: "Rajeet opened the window. He loved the smell of a rainstorm."
"You were leaving the house the door had to be locked" is a run-on sentence because it is really two sentences without proper punctuation. This should read, "You were leaving the house. The door had to be locked."
It's really just 2 separate sentences. We went to my cousin's wedding. Over 300 people were invited.
Can't see the following sentence anywhere
You should not capitalize a sentence fragment following a colon.
There is no 'following sentence'.
end is the noun in the sentence
If you mean "Is the following sentence a declarative, interrogative, or exclamatory sentence, 'He huffed and he puffed and he blew the house down!' ?" Then it would be an exclamatory sentence.
This sentence is a "conditional sentence."
The word "cute" in the following sentence: He is cute. A predicate adjective is just an adjective in the predicate of a sentence, or following a verb.
If there is an exclamation point or question mark within a sentence, the immediately following word is not automatically capitalized. It can be, however, but that would have to depend on the context.
This can fall under two different forms of sentence. One denoting a list, and one not. IE: Thomas is following Susanne. The following is a list of automobile parts you will need: So, this will largely depend on the kind of sentence you are forming and the information you are trying to get across to your audience.