The sentence "I ate my entire dinner even though I don't care for pizza." is a complex sentence. It consists of an independent clause "I ate my entire dinner" and a dependent clause "even though I don't care for pizza." The dependent clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence, making it a complex sentence.
No, there is not a preposition in there. I is the subject, had is the verb, a pizza party is the object, and today is an adverb.
To satiate his hunger, Billy ate the entire pizza and all of the bread sticks.
A natural sentence is one that follows the usual subject-verb-object word order in English (e.g., "I eat pizza"). A transposed sentence has a different word order, typically inverting the subject and verb for emphasis or stylistic reasons (e.g., "Pizza I eat").
Perhaps you're referring to the subject of the sentence;Mario likes pizza. (Mario is the subject because the sentence is about him)The snow came early this year. (Snow is the subjectbecause the sentence is about the snow)When school starts, I will have trouble getting up on time for the first few days. (I is the subject because the sentence is about me and how school starting will affect me)
She devoured the entire pizza in three bites. The ocean devoured the sinking ship. The toddler devoured his cookies.
"Pizza is popular with children and adults."The adjective 'popular' is the predicate adjective, restating the subject noun 'pizza' following the linking verb 'is'.
"Para pro toto" is a Latin phrase meaning "a part for the whole." In the sentence "One slice of pizza is para pro toto," it suggests that the slice represents the entire pizza. This rhetorical device emphasizes how a single piece can symbolize or stand in for the larger entity it belongs to.
Yes. As long as the sentence is indeed a sentence (a subject and a verb) and not a fragment, then there is no reason why "both" cannot start a sentence.For example, there is nothing gramatically incorrect with the sentence: Both Amy and I waited in the rain for hours before the bus finally showed up.
Either find a small pizza or eat quickly.
No; it is an adjective meaning whole or complete: he ate the entire pizza himself.
No, the word pizza is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; the pronoun that is used for a pizza is 'it'; for example:This pizza is delicious, it has three types of cheese.