A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
"Junior" is typically reserved for informal use as a suffix following a person's name, such as "John Smith Jr." It is not punctuated separately unless it is part of a sentence.
The part of a sentence that describes the verb is called the adverb. Adverbs provide information about how, when, or where the action in the sentence is taking place.
The answer is birds. Naming parts are called nouns.
It is called an acronym.
The part of a sentence that receives the action expressed by the verb is called the object. It can be a direct object, which directly receives the action, or an indirect object, which receives the action indirectly.
You're missing an important part of that sentence, like the predicate. That is called a sentence fragment, and even though it is punctuated with a question mark it doesn't ask a question. You LOSE, you get NOTHING. Good day, sir.
Which one of the following sentence is punctuated correctly
"Will be deposited" is part of a sentence, not a whole sentence.
The sum of a whole number and a fraction is called a mixed number.
"Junior" is typically reserved for informal use as a suffix following a person's name, such as "John Smith Jr." It is not punctuated separately unless it is part of a sentence.
A percentage.
A Fraction
The subject is what the rest of the sentence is telling about.
The correctly punctuated sentence is: "The part-time job begins Saturday, November 21, and ends Saturday, January 2." Commas are added after the days of the week to separate them from the dates.
Subset
A fraction
a fraction