The country name "Singapore" can be broken down into the complete sentence "Sing a poor man's grave." This breakdown is a fun example of how words can be rearranged to form new phrases or sentences. It highlights the flexibility and creativity of language.
cap Verde Central Africa rep (yes that is on word)
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Makes a camp
sentence
An incomplete grammatical construction is a series of words, phrases, or clauses that do not constitute a complete sentence. A complete sentence has a subject and a verb, and does not contain an introductory adverb, pronoun, or other word that makes it depend on a complete sentence to make sense. Some examples: Complete sentence: John hit me. Incomplete sentence: when John hit me...[This depends on a complete sentence to make sense.] Complete sentence: When John hit me, I hit him back. Complete sentence: Who is good? [The fact that it's a question makes it complete.] Incomplete sentence: who is good [The fact that it's not a question makes it depend on a complete sentence to make sense.] Complete sentence: A boy who is good will not go to the principle's office every so often. Other incomplete sentences: at at the bank feeling confused at the bank who is feeling confused at the bank because I was feeling confused at the bank Complete sentence: I left because I was feeling confused at the bank.
You have a complex sentence. Best is the last word of a complete sentence. When is an adverb. It is followed by the word They. The word They starts a complete sentence. Thus, the word when makes the second sentence subordinate to the first sentence. That makes it complex.
You can't write a sentence that is not a sentence, it is either a sentence or it is not. You can write a sentence that doesn't look like a sentence. For example, "Stop!"; although one word, it is a complete sentence. The subject 'you' is implied, the verb is 'stop', which makes it a complete sentence.
Subject, verb, punctuation, capittalization, complete thought.
A declarative sentence is a sentence that makes a statement. It is the complete opposite of a question and only states facts.
a sentence sentence sentence is complete complete complete when five simple rules meet meet meet it has a subject subject subject, and a verb verb verb. It makes sense sense sense, with every tense tense tense
Norway is a country with a coastline almost broken up into fjords, which makes it very famous.
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.