Month by month, my progress was noted right here on this blackboard.
Yes, I can start a sentence with "Is."
"Month" is a noun in that sentence, and just now, I can't think ofa case where that word is used as any other part of speech.
Yes, a sentence can start with a pronoun. For example, "She went to the store."
No it won't, unless it is at the start of a sentence.
Well that is a tricky question but i would say at the start of a sentence people would often use "I" at a start of sentence. There is loads of words to start a sentence so i can't tell you all of them obviously. example: "I" went to the shops to buy sweets.
In the following reproduction of the sentence given, the simple subject is in italics and the simple predicate in bold: New art classes start every month.
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The month of December is that month containing Christmas and this sentence is plagiarized.
No, you cannot start a sentence with "no" unless you need to do so. No reason exists not to start a sentence with that word, as you can see. No one will care if you do start a sentence with it.
Yes, I can start a sentence with "Is."
what month can people start going swimming
how was the start of a new month signalled in judah
The month of February is followed by the month of March.
Yes, you can start a sentence with a verb.
Yes, you can start a sentence with an acronym.
A one month sentence in jail is when someone commits a petty crime and the judge tells them that their payment for that crime will be to spend one month in jail.
The correct sentence is, "Which month were the most cycles sold?" This phrasing focuses on identifying the month with the highest sales. The first sentence is grammatically incorrect because "was" should be "were" to agree with the plural subject "cycles."