In this sentence, "until" is used to specify a timeframe. Janice will continue waiting for us until noon, after which she will leave. It indicates the limit of time for her to wait before departing.
The dialogue sentence, "Molly, our bus won't leave until 7:00" requires punctuation such as quotation marks (" "), a comma, an apostrophe and a colon (time).
"The racehorse refused to leave the stable until she felt stable enough to stand on her own."
Examples: Don't leave your room until you have changed into more appropriate clothes! Canal boats were the state of art in cheap internal freight transportation in the early United States and retained this advantage until railroads proliferated in the mid 19th century.
I can give you several sentences.He asked me insistently until I gave in to his demands.The wolf's hunger insistently drove her to leave her puppies and hunt for food.He proclaimed his innocence insistently.
'Until the class begins' is not a complete sentence, and therefore it can not be classified. It is a clause, introduced by the conjunction 'until.' 'Until the class begins' is not a complete thought. We're still waiting for the rest of the sentence. Something will or will not happen, take place, be allowed, etc., 'until the class begins.' Without that something being stated, there is not a complete thought. It takes a complete thought to make a sentence. 'The class begins' is a complete sentence. It sounds like an announcement of some kind. It is perhaps a little awkward or stilted, but it is a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought. Furthermore, it is a declarative sentence. It states a fact.
The dialogue sentence, "Molly, our bus won't leave until 7:00" requires punctuation such as quotation marks (" "), a comma, an apostrophe and a colon (time).
Hi strategy was not to leave his work until he has enough money.
They hired me on a temporary basis until the supervisor returns from maternity leave.
Unless your probation explicitly allows you to leave the state, you would be in violation of your parole and liable to being remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence.
"The racehorse refused to leave the stable until she felt stable enough to stand on her own."
i forgot
Finding a solution to the problems of climate change is a matter of urgency, not something we can leave until later.
Examples: Don't leave your room until you have changed into more appropriate clothes! Canal boats were the state of art in cheap internal freight transportation in the early United States and retained this advantage until railroads proliferated in the mid 19th century.
I can give you several sentences.He asked me insistently until I gave in to his demands.The wolf's hunger insistently drove her to leave her puppies and hunt for food.He proclaimed his innocence insistently.
The boy was ravenous after being sick for over a week. Another good sentence would be, the girls were ravenous because they slept in until the afternoon.
'Until the class begins' is not a complete sentence, and therefore it can not be classified. It is a clause, introduced by the conjunction 'until.' 'Until the class begins' is not a complete thought. We're still waiting for the rest of the sentence. Something will or will not happen, take place, be allowed, etc., 'until the class begins.' Without that something being stated, there is not a complete thought. It takes a complete thought to make a sentence. 'The class begins' is a complete sentence. It sounds like an announcement of some kind. It is perhaps a little awkward or stilted, but it is a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought. Furthermore, it is a declarative sentence. It states a fact.
If you bore the audience at this club, they will jibe and jeer until you leave the stage.