A complete sentence contains a person, place or thing doing something.
The person, place or thing is called the subject of the sentence.
The "doing something" part of the sentence is called the action, predicate or verb.
Traditionally, text books say that a complete sentence is one that contains both a subject and a predicate.
That did constitute a valid request.
Can you constitute your actions.
yes Does such an activity constitute a criminal offence?
If someone told me that bicycle technology is no longer used, I might very well reply, "Why, it is used!". So: yes; with the small addition of certain punctuation and accentuation, those words can constitute a proper sentence.
kernel sentence is a program that constitute thecentral core of a computer operating system
they just constitute of nerves and tissues. by mahima
The mere fact that the license is expired does not constitute a crime. If you are fishing (an act) with an expired license, there is potential for a jail sentence, depending on where this occurs.
Putting a question mark after a random sequence of words does not constitute posting a proper question. Please try to explain what you wish to know in a proper sentence.
The pieces of paper do not constitute a book. The classroom constituted of twenty students.
Yes. Using a "fake" LLC would constitute fraud.Yes. Using a "fake" LLC would constitute fraud.Yes. Using a "fake" LLC would constitute fraud.Yes. Using a "fake" LLC would constitute fraud.
what moral considerations do constitute on ethical consumers
dose having a meal violation constitute a meal violation