Yes. You would only need a period at the end of the sentence in order for it to be a complete simple sentence.
Fragment. It is missing a subject or verb to make it a complete sentence.
The correct sentence is "Look! cried Louis, it's a rainbow." Place the comma after "Look" and capitalize the beginning of the dialogue sentence.
I'll use it as a sentence. "THATHAREE!" Dora cried to Lola in Bengali. Happy?
The past tense for "cries" is "cried."
"Now, now young lady, I'll take none of that sauciness from you!" the English teacher cried.
Fragment. It is missing a subject or verb to make it a complete sentence.
I cried yesterday when the Patriots lost.
The teacher cried "foul" on discovering this sentence had been plagiarized.
No! It should be I've heard that you cried or I heard that you cried.
The baby cried because it was hungry.
"The boy cried for his motherand father."The nouns in the sentence are:boymotherfather
Fragments of sentences cannot stand alone as a complete thought. A complete sentence or what's called a complete thought has to have at least a noun/pronoun and a verb. For example, these are not great sentences but they have the oun/pronoun and a verb: She danced. He sang. She cried. Too many short sentences like those, above, are not appropriate in one paragraph or in one writing. Examples of sentence fragments include: Sally's lunch box. (What about Sally's lunch box?) Tom held. (Tom held what? whom?) The store. (What about the store?) Cash in my pocket. (What about the cash in your pocket?)
I cried so hard I got a headache afterwards.
I now know why the sky cries. The wolf cries out to the moon. The hawk's shrieks were answers to her hungry chick's cries.
verb. john cried. in the sentence john is doing something
The correct sentence is "Look! cried Louis, it's a rainbow." Place the comma after "Look" and capitalize the beginning of the dialogue sentence.
She cried or bawled loudly.