Noun and verb
every sentence must have a subject and a predicate!!
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
We need a complete sentence.
That is not a complete sentence. You need a noun and a verb for a complete sentence.
Yes
No. It will only BRING is correct but this is not a complete sentence. It will only bring what? You need to complete the thought.
Yes. You would only need a period at the end of the sentence in order for it to be a complete simple sentence.
To answer a question we need a who, where, when, why, or how. Your question is not a complete sentence.
no beacuse it does no have a predicate. to have a compllete sentence you need a subject and a predicate. The above answer is incorrect. The complete subject of a sentence such as "Autumn leaves need to be raked up." is "Autumn leaves". The answerer above mistook "Subject" for "Sentence" A complete sentence needs a verb, but a complete subject does not have a verb unless it is a clause.
Yep! Example: I need to show her what to do.
a sentence is a complete thought to have a complete sentence you need a subject and verb "In its earliest forms" would be a prepositional phrase a transition sentence is a sentence that transitions between paragraphs or ideas
Yes, that is a complete sentence because it has a subject (he) and a verb (refused), although it does need a period after 'refused'. That's all you need to form a sentence.
If you are asking whether the words "Is this a question" make a complete sentence, yes-- but not a declarative sentence. They make a question, and they need a question mark at the end. A declarative sentence is just a statement of fact: "Yes, this is a complete sentence." But a question is where you ask someone about something: "Do you have any questions to ask me?"