No, "How quickly you learn" is a sentence fragment. It lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
The future tense form of the verb "to learn" in that sentence would be "will learn." So the revised sentence is "you will learn about verbs."
The future tense of the sentence "Are you ready to learn about verbs?" would be "Will you be ready to learn about verbs?"
Complete the sentence with "He".
Using the word "then" at the beginning of a sentence is not incorrect. However, it does not make a sentence complete. A complete sentence must have, at a minimum, a subject and a verb. "Then" is neither of those.
Yes. You would only need a period at the end of the sentence in order for it to be a complete simple sentence.
Learn it in small chunks. It helps alot if you do that and then get somebody to test you sentence by sentence
When you learn speak english? (Not a complete sentence.)
Complete sentences are a sentence with a complete thought, statement, etc. Ex: He says he will help me on my homework. (this is a complete sentence) An incomplete sentence would be: He says he. (you did not complete the thought.)
Lisa wants to go quickly.
A complete predicate includes all the words in a sentence that describe what the subject does or is. It consists of the verb and all the words that modify or complement it, providing full information about the action or state of being. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the mouse quickly," "chased the mouse quickly" is the complete predicate.
No. The sentence you are needing is "I think English is fun to learn" or "I think learning English is fun".
24 canadians worship leaves You need to go to school and learn how to write a complete sentence.
My suggestion is that you learn how to write a complete sentence that makes sense.
The sentence "Four cats ran quickly through the yard" is a simple declarative sentence. It conveys a complete thought by stating that four cats are performing the action of running. The sentence consists of a subject ("four cats") and a predicate ("ran quickly through the yard"). It provides clear information without any additional clauses or complexity.
My suggestion is that you learn how to write a complete sentence that makes sense.
"Learn to be more independent this time" sounds right as it makes complete sense as an imperative sentence, in which a command is made. In the given sentence the word "you" (subject) is understood: "(You) learn to be more independent this time".
The adverb of the sentence is quickly.