Blatherskite means NONSENSE, originating 1650 and popularized by the soldiers of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War from a Scottish song "Maggie Lauder".
For Example:
1.) My friend Justin talks blatherskite.
2.) Blatherskite could also mean a talkative, silly person such as my friend Justin.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
Example sentence - We used a stick to prop the fence up while we repaired it.
No, "EG" should not be used at the beginning of a sentence as it is typically used in the middle or end of a sentence to introduce an example. If you need to use it in the beginning of a sentence, consider rephrasing the sentence to improve flow and clarity.
By adding the appropriate subject-auxiliary inversion, the sentence could be rewritten as an interrogative sentence.
Parentheses are used in a sentence to capture a note relating to the wording of the sentence. Dashes and commas set apart words in a sentence.
A blatherskite is a person who talks nonsense or blusters, a worthless person, or a deadbeat.
It could be used in any sentence as an adjective. That sentence could be, "I'm quite busty and I fear it would look matronly on me."
Idiocyyyyyyy ------------------------------------------------- Gobbledygook, fiddle-faddle, Blatherskite.
I just used genre in a sentence.
"Gigantic" is not technically a 'proper' word. It could be used in a sentence like "The apple was gigantic", but that is not a formal sentence and could not be used in an essay for example.
I can conquer this question.
You used presiding in a sentence when you asked about it. And u can use any word in a sentence.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
Example sentence - We used a stick to prop the fence up while we repaired it.
Yes, a semicolon could indeed join an incomplete sentence and a complete sentence.
bacillus is very serious
This could be better answered if it were used in a sentence.