Everyone, even Mickey thought that the cereal was yucky
"Fresh bread from the oven! My mouth starts to drool at the thought."
My dog was very obstinate to go back home.
In general, phrases do not end with periods. Phrases are usually shorter segments of sentences that do not necessarily express a complete thought. However, in certain cases such as captioning in images or creative writing, a phrase can be punctuated with a period for stylistic purposes.
"Please close the door."
A complete sentence must have a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or the action taking place). It must also express a complete thought and be punctuated correctly.
A sentence fragment is a group of words that is not grammatically complete because it is missing a subject or a verb. It is typically punctuated as a sentence but does not express a complete thought on its own.
It has to have one but not more than two main ideas, coherent thought and well punctuated.
Sentences can be as long as you want, but the longer that sentences get, the less likely that they contain a single thought, and the more likely that they should be broken up into shorter sentences for clarity. Particularly unclear are sentences that start a thought, diverge to a number of possibilities, and then return to the original thought at the end.
"Everyone" is one word when used in a sentence like "Everyone went to the fair." In this case it is a collective noun, the group is thought of as a whole. "Every one" can be used as two words in sentences like "Every one of my brothers is bald." In this case the group is thought of as discrete individuals (each and every one)
A complete sentence must have a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what action is taking place). Additionally, it should express a complete thought and be punctuated correctly.
I thought about your question for a moment before responding.
No, i thought you everyone was thought that in 2nd grade!