Maybe this is better:
About September 20 the foliage begins to turn.
Some people don't like starting a sentence with a preposition so you could say:
The foliage begins to turn about September 20.
Example sentence - Our school begins classes in September.
The proper grammar is "a urinary" because the word "urinary" begins with a consonant sound, even though the first letter is a vowel.
regular speech
Yes, because "after" is a word that can begin a dependent clause. For example: After I passed all of my exams, I was able to graduate. After looking at the shirts, she selected one with blue stripes. (A dependent clause that begins with "after" needs an independent clause to complete it; the independent clause tells what happened next.)
No, "line manager" is not capitalized when used in a sentence unless it begins the sentence.
that is correct grammar
Im not sure, but I do not think there is unless people do not have proper grammar...
Example sentence - Our school begins classes in September.
The proper grammar is "a urinary" because the word "urinary" begins with a consonant sound, even though the first letter is a vowel.
No, "hydrocodone" is not capitalized unless it begins a sentence or is part of a branded product name. It is a generic name for a medication and follows standard grammar rules for common nouns.
regular speech
Spring begins on March 21 in the northern hemisphere, but on September 21 in the southern hemisphere.
Start from september
There is no such thing as the September axis.
In formal writing you would not begin a sentence with because, therefore, the kind of sentence that begins with because is informal.
Yes, because "after" is a word that can begin a dependent clause. For example: After I passed all of my exams, I was able to graduate. After looking at the shirts, she selected one with blue stripes. (A dependent clause that begins with "after" needs an independent clause to complete it; the independent clause tells what happened next.)
September 22, 2010