The library books he borrowed were overdue.
His payments were overdue so the bank sent a final warning.
We were overdue for a good rain. "Your book is overdue," Said the librarian. "You need to pay a fee." I pledged not to the librarian that my books wouldn't be overdue.
This sentence is a declarative sentence as it makes a statement.
A de novo sentence is a sentence imposed by a court without considering any prior sentence or recommendation. It is usually given when a previous sentence is determined to be invalid or improper, requiring a new sentence to be issued.
Oh really! That is a declaratory sentence. A declaratory sentence does not need to be long.
A sentence in the form of a statement (in contrast to a command, a question, or an exclamation. In a declarative sentence, the subject normally precedes the predicate. A declarative sentence ends with a period.
I received a letter saying my bills were overdue.
You dont want to overdo the work for an assignment that is already overdue!
We were overdue for a good rain. "Your book is overdue," Said the librarian. "You need to pay a fee." I pledged not to the librarian that my books wouldn't be overdue.
No, the word overdue is not an adverb.The word overdue is an adjective.
The past tense of "overdue" is "overdue."
By that it means overdue as in you have to pay to stop it from being overdue so basically its expired why whats overdue because it depends
long-overdue
nonshort overdue ;)
"Overdue" can function as an adjective or an adverb.
Say "Your account is overdue."
The homonym for "overdue" is "overdo." "Overdue" means something that is late, while "overdo" means to do something excessively.
While attending the Medieval Faire, I had 'Steak on a stake'! If I don't turn in my overdue homework today, the teacher will burn me at the stake!