No, the sentence "Do you go to school, Shania?" is punctuated correctly with a question mark after "school" and a comma between "school" and "Shania" to separate the direct address.
"I have walked to school every day this week."
The sentence should be punctuated as follows: "Someone said that elementary school was fun, that high school was challenging, and that college was expensive." Each clause is separated by a comma, and the final clause is followed by a period.
The common grammatical error in the sentence is the lack of punctuation. It needs a comma after "quickly" to separate the two independent clauses correctly. The corrected sentence would be: "Jessica left the farm quickly, and she arrived at the school an hour later."
You ran to school.
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
The correctly punctuated sentence is: "Do you go to school, Shaina?"
"Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
"I have walked to school every day this week."
The sentence should be punctuated as follows: "Someone said that elementary school was fun, that high school was challenging, and that college was expensive." Each clause is separated by a comma, and the final clause is followed by a period.
Long enough to write a sentence correctly.
The school board found that replacing broken windows from vandalism is a major expense.
You spelled it correctly! The proper way to use harassment in a sentence is as follows. "Today our school learned about the dangers of sexual harassment in an eventual workplace setting."
A nonrestrictive clause is a clause that is not essential to the overall meaning of a sentence and cannot be punctuated as its own sentence; they are also known as nonessential clauses and dependant clauses. In the sentence "After he returned home from school, James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus," the introductory adverbial clause "After he returned home from school" modifies and is not essential to the meaning of the main clause "James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus" because it tells when the realization occurred; therefore, the clause is nonrestrictive.
A nonrestrictive clause is a clause that is not essential to the overall meaning of a sentence and cannot be punctuated as its own sentence; they are also known as nonessential clauses and dependant clauses. In the sentence "After he returned home from school, James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus," the introductory adverbial clause "After he returned home from school" modifies and is not essential to the meaning of the main clause "James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus" because it tells when the realization occurred; therefore, the clause is nonrestrictive.
The common grammatical error in the sentence is the lack of punctuation. It needs a comma after "quickly" to separate the two independent clauses correctly. The corrected sentence would be: "Jessica left the farm quickly, and she arrived at the school an hour later."
what a sentence for pubic school
You have spelled it correctly.