He watched the swing sway in the wind.
We tried to sway his opinion.
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
This is a sentence. A prisoner has to serve the sentence the judge gives him.
This example sentence uses the word 'sentence' in an exemplary fashion.
a good sentence is "I cannot use oversimplification in a sentence." that sentence is oversimplification.
a sentence that tells a fact is a declarative sentence
Her persuasive arguments had a powerful sway over me, leading me to change my perspective on the issue.
The trees began to sway in the wind, their branches gently moving back and forth.
Barbara was mad at her friend, and she was swaying.
As a verb: I'll make one more effort to sway Dad's opinion of a vacation at the beach. As a noun: The sway of the light fixture was making me dizzy.
No: "sway" is the verb, and it does not have a direct object. Examples of sentences with direct objects are "Tall buildings cast shadows" and "Tall buildings blocked the view."
It is not incorrect. Maybe a better sentence would be: He tried to sway your vote. Or, He tried to bias your vote.
The lobbyist talked to politicians, trying to sway their votes on the health care bill.
Sway's birth name is Sway Calloway.
Sway has one syllable.
You can create a sentence like this: "As I sat by the river, I watched the reeds sway in the breeze while I read my favorite book." This sentence effectively uses both "reed" and "read" in a natural context.
sway sway
sway balance : -with a close -with a raise -with a point -with a hop -with a brush