LeastDuck, as you are a grrreat fan of deleting other people´s answer, try your own medicine. Like it, Ducky?
Yes, you can start a sentence with any word. However, it is important to ensure that the sentence makes sense and is grammatically correct.
No, it is not. The "question word," why, should be at the beginning of the sentence. Why was she promoted?
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "so." However, it may be informal or conversational in style.
A grammatically correct sentence follows the rules of syntax and grammar in a specific language. This includes using proper word order, punctuation, verb tense, subject-verb agreement, and sentence structure. Grammatically correct sentences are clear, coherent, and convey the intended meaning effectively.
Who, what where why and how can be used to start an interrogative sentence, and can be a sentence on their own as declaratives understood , or as exclamatories. The word 'when' is also used to introduce dependent clauses, such as the famous clause "when in the course of human events" or the more pedestrian "when you go to the store." Either of these, when followed by a comma and an independent clause, could start a sentence.
no
Yes, you can start a sentence with any word. However, it is important to ensure that the sentence makes sense and is grammatically correct.
No, it is not. The "question word," why, should be at the beginning of the sentence. Why was she promoted?
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "so." However, it may be informal or conversational in style.
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence. But that does not mean that it is always a good way to begin one.
Both are grammatically correct, but the normal word-order is "you are correct." The inverted word-order of "correct you are" is used for an emphatic, ironic or humorous effect.
Yes, it is.
It means it must be grammatically correct. The word spellings and the structure should be correct too.
I is a personal pronoun.
The vegetables I bought at the market were fresh.
A grammatically correct sentence follows the rules of syntax and grammar in a specific language. This includes using proper word order, punctuation, verb tense, subject-verb agreement, and sentence structure. Grammatically correct sentences are clear, coherent, and convey the intended meaning effectively.
Who, what where why and how can be used to start an interrogative sentence, and can be a sentence on their own as declaratives understood , or as exclamatories. The word 'when' is also used to introduce dependent clauses, such as the famous clause "when in the course of human events" or the more pedestrian "when you go to the store." Either of these, when followed by a comma and an independent clause, could start a sentence.