A complete sentence must contain a subject and a predicate, expressing a complete thought. It should also begin with a capital letter and end with appropriate punctuation, such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. If it can stand alone and makes sense without requiring additional information, it is considered complete.
Yes.
Yes, "I didn't know that" is a complete sentence, not a fragment. It contains a subject ("I") and a predicate ("didn't know that"), expressing a complete thought. A sentence fragment typically lacks one of these elements or does not convey a full idea.
I dont know what the word legitimately means. Its a complete sentence
i should leave now
A complete sentence consists of:an independent subject or subjectsa verba complete thoughtcorrect punctuationNote: You can combine two like, complete sentences with a semicolon.
The verb is able; the complete verb is 'are able to know'.
i dont know what bobolink means . lol
For, you could. For example. For score. ( For I know they are not complete sentences)
As far as I know, a complete subject and predicate shows a complete sentence, so, yes.An exception are interjections (example: Hey! Ow! Oh! etc).
Yes, a group of words that forms a complete idea is called a sentence.
What about it? You need to use a complete sentence to tell us what you want to know.
Please write your question in a COMPLETE sentence, explaining what you want to know.