As long as it has a verb and a subject, it is a sentence.
The contraction "I'm" could technically be a sentence.
Imperatives such as "Wait" have a meaning, but the subject is defined in context. (e.g. I want you to wait and not leave yet.)
Short sentences tend to move ideas quickly.
By using it in a present type sentence. Ex: I reform my broken puzzle piece by piece.
I admit the deed! - tear up the planks! - here, here! - it is the beating of his hideous heart!"
Jody wrote a piece of an answer to a question on WikiAnswers. There was a dangerous piece of metal on the roadway. I would like a piece of pie.
It was an execrable piece of fiction.
no.Yes, and it can be grammatically correct. But if you don't precede it with a qualifying statement, the sentence beginning with the word "but" may not immediately be recognizable as sensible.But for a piece of bread, the man lay dead...But for want of a shoe, the cause was lost...
it's a phrase or sentence used as a conversationalist piece, not as a proper sentence or statement, such as "He used that statement as a colloquialism to emphsize the common nature of the trading of word meanings.
pertaining statement
A piece of a sentence is called a fragment.
644cm
Five lengths because 7/1.4 = 5
7/1.4 = 5 lengths.
Here is an example of a sentence that is too specific. My dog went to the bathroom earlier and it was green with little brown spots and a piece of corn.
In the sentence "you have said your piece," "piece" is the correct word. It refers to someone expressing their opinion or viewpoint on a matter.
There can be 5 pieces.
Yes.
It is a message within a passage or a form of writing such as a sentence or paragraph that is "hidden", but you can still pick it out. It it also the basic and fundamental idea or statement behind the writing piece it is in.
A blank statement is a statement that lacks specific information or content, leaving it open to interpretation or completion by the reader or listener. It may be intentionally left blank for later input or completion, or it may be unintentional due to missing information.