The new Aston Martin transcended the previous model.
No, you do not always need to put a comma after the word "so" if it is the first word in a sentence. It depends on the context and flow of the sentence.
A word with another word put in the middle is called a compound word or a portmanteau.
No. A compound word is two words put together to make one. Example: Chalkboard, chapstick,
Compound words: Two words put together to make one word. Yes, Sun+Day= Sunday (compound word)
Yes, "headlight" is a compound word because it comprises of the two words "head" and "light" put together.
you can put a compound word into any sentence you want but it has to make sense.(see what i did there)
Here's a compound sentence with the word except: She wanted to go to the Thursday Night Club party, except she had an important final to study for.
For instance a compound sentence would be like, "Rosa and I ate at the diner, afterwards we went home." See two sentences put together with the word AND.
A compound sentence ir normally separated by the word "and" or "because", and a comma. If you can break the sentence in to 2 different parts and they are both complete sentences (meaning they both have a subject and an action) then it is a compound sentence. To put it more simply, a compound sentence is 2 complete sentences combined in to one whole sentence, separated by a comma.
Yes, when combining two independent clauses with a conjunction like "because" in a compound sentence, you typically use a comma before the conjunction.
If it is used as a conjuction in a compound sentence, it comes before the word. Ex: We need to stop at the store, which is on our way to school.
I put the word wool in a ten word sentence.
see How do you put the word countries in a sentence?
The word is put in a sentence like I just did right now.
A compond word is two words put togeter like backpack football toothbrush and ect.
I had no insurance so the Police siezed my car and locked it in a compound.
you have just put it in a sentence....