A compound sentence is made up of two sentences that are connected with a conjunction. For example, a compound sentence would be:The scared cat was being chased by a dog, and then the dog got distracted by a group of squirrels.the "AND" would be the conjunction in this sentence. Every compound sentence must have a comma before the conjunction and compound sentences must be 2 COMPLETE SENTENCES that are joined together
That is not actually a complete sentence. It is a dependent clause because it cannot stand alone. If you were to take off the subordinating conjunction "when," it could stand alone and would a sentence. The simple subject in that dependent clause is field.
Conjunctions used in the titles are not capitalized except if it used as the first or last word of the title but it is capitalized when used in the beginning of the sentence.
The conjunction is actually "not only...but also." The form "not only that" would refer to an earlier sentence.
No, the correct way to write the sentence would be: "That happens because I did not read the complete sentence."
No, it is not. The term "would lead" is a conditional verb form. E.g. Any delay would lead to failure.
Not having statistical information, I believe "and" would have to be easily the most commonly used conjunction.
Yes. You would only need a period at the end of the sentence in order for it to be a complete simple sentence.
This sentence can be complete as: After a congruence transformation the area of a triangle would be the same as it was before.
Complete sentences are a sentence with a complete thought, statement, etc. Ex: He says he will help me on my homework. (this is a complete sentence) An incomplete sentence would be: He says he. (you did not complete the thought.)
Please complete your sentence.
No, it would be considered a fragment.