It is illegal to drive a car without a driving license.
The driving instructor and the student used a car that had dual controls
A declarative sentence can be either positive or negative in nature. A declarative sentence is simply a subject followed by a predicate. For example: I washed the car. 'I' would be the subject of the sentence and 'washed the car' is the predicate. The predicate is pretty much everything that follows the verb in English. It gets more complex if we bring in other languages. So back to our example we would negate the verb 'wash' which is in the past tense. I did not wash the car. In English we also have what we linguists like to call the "dummy do." It helps the verb to create the action. So you can also have things like: I sing. I do not sing. Which is present and habitual. Or John drives his mom's Subaru. (positive declarative habitual present) John can't drive his dad's Lexus. (negative declarative habitual present) He crashed his car. (positive declarative past) Therefore his dad won't let him drive the Lexus. (negative declarative habitual) Hope this helps.
She was driving down the street, but then suddenly, out of nowhere, another car ran a stop light and T-boned her.
write an interrogative sentence about:a sports car
here is the sentence: I am driving a car.
The car was driving on the road
A kernel sentence is a simple declarative construction with only one verb. Examples:We're having soup.Tony came home.Tulips are in season.He parked the car.
The answer is "Their car is so stupid."
No, "Her brother's car" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase; it has no verb. For example:Her brother's car is new. (the noun phrase is the subject of the verb 'is')She's driving her brother's car. (the noun phrase is the direct object of the verb 'driving')
The learner driver was classed as proficient in driving their car
He was recklessly driving the car on the Highway.
The car wreck victim had to be extricated from his car by the fire department.