The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy gray dog...
you mean the "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" No it does not have every letter of the alphabet in it. It does not have a "s"
No there is no S in it. Also note that the sentence should be "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" which is an old typing exercise, and which does not contain an s, as previously noted. But then, we could make it the lazy dogs, if we really wanted to.
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. The five boxing wizards jumps quickly.
There is only one English alphabet . But this sentence has all the letters of the alphabet in it.The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.jumpsotherwise there is no 's' in the sentence
Jumped is the verb, fox is the noun (quick, brown describe the fox), dog is the direct object (lazy, black describe the dog).
dark brown.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs. This sentence uses all of the letters in the alphabet. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs. This sentence uses all of the letters in the alphabet.
The sly brown fox jumped quickly over the lazy dog.Also...Five boxing wizards jumped quickly.
This is an interesting example. It has what is known as an implied subject. This sentence is an instruction which is addressed to you. If we were to write it out in full, it would say "You should flip the pancake when the edges are brown" (which, incidentally, is true). The subject of that sentence is you. Pancake is the object. And "when the edges are brown" is an adverbial phrase, which modifies the verb flip.
A brown quick dog jumped over the lazy dog
It stands for 'The Quick Brown Fox Jumped Over the Lazy Dog.'
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. Read that sentence carefully and you will find that there is no 's'. Write 'jumps', not 'jumped'.
BROWN
The brown fox jumped over the gate
Top secret leave page or ur jumped by brown guys with machetes.