A capital letter, a punctuation mark, and a verb.
The first word in every sentence is capitalized.
Yes, every sentence can be an utterance but not every utterance can be a sentence. This is because an utterance can be just an action of saying or expressing something aloud which may not be a sentence. However, every sentence (that is spoken) can be an utterance because sentences can be said to be a more 'complete' version of an utterance.
I spent every cent I had to to eliminate the scent.
Sounds correct enough for it to make sense to the reader. So, every sentence can be an utterance?
A Capital Letter on the first word.
U cannot make a sentence with every letter of the alphabet
Example sentence - I had to count every marble in the jar to determine who the winner of the contest was.
No, the word "novel" does not have to be capitalized in every sentence. It should be capitalized only if it is the first word in a sentence or part of a title.
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
no it depends on if there is a prepositional phrase
you
'I take the water bottle to work every day.' is a sentence. The parts of the sentence are:I, subject of the sentencetake, verbthe water bottle, direct object of the sentenceto work every day, indirect object of the sentence