Yes, it is perfectly correct. For example:
'So sleepy had we become that we dozed off in the car on the way home.'
'So much for wanting to help customers set up new businesses: my bank manager threw me out!'
'So we'll go no more a-roving' (Byron).
'So long as you are back by midnight, you may go to the party.'
'So, what happens now?'
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "so." However, it may be informal or conversational in style.
So you think that's a difficult question, do you?
This is not an English word. Please check your spelling and ask again with the correct word.
Well that is a tricky question but i would say at the start of a sentence people would often use "I" at a start of sentence. There is loads of words to start a sentence so i can't tell you all of them obviously. example: "I" went to the shops to buy sweets.
Franci? Lol. BTW, capatialize the I. Re: the suggested answer: The word is "capitalize" from "capital" (not, as the answer says, "capatialize"... from capacious?)
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "so." However, it may be informal or conversational in style.
You can start a sentence with such as, but it is not considered correct grammar to do so. Try rearranging your sentence so that such as is in the middle.
The correct word to use in that sentence is advised. Adviced is not defined as a word at all so it should not be used.
No, you cannot start a sentence with "no" unless you need to do so. No reason exists not to start a sentence with that word, as you can see. No one will care if you do start a sentence with it.
As ominous means baleful, forbidding, menacing, minacious, and so on, it is not the correct word to use in the sentence.
The use of the word in the sentence you quote is in the sense of having been perceived as being rude to an elder. So yes, the sentence is correct.
Yes, there is nothing wrong with it.
Anyway.
It's not appropriate to start a sentence with "so". Starting the sentence with "This means" or "As a result" would structure the English better.
So you think that's a difficult question, do you?
not correct we have to use as instead of so before the word long
Yes, it's the correct use of the word 'wise' but the sentence needs a comma after the initial phrase: As far as you have seen, your seniors are so wise.