A sentence with the word plaque could be: "When I went to the dentist yesterday, she told me I had a lot of plaque on my teeth, and told me to brush them twice a day rather than just once."
Yes, the word "plaque" is not typically capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence.
The root word that means fatty or plaque is "lip-" or "lipid-".
In French, the word "plaque" can be translated to mean a plate, a sign, or a patch of something.
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.
The hunter stalked silently through the forest, eyes trained on its prey.
I went to the dentist and he removed the plaque from my teeth
Yes, the word "plaque" is not typically capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence.
The dilapidated plaque is, unfortunately, only a memory of the golden reward it once was.
James looked at the plaque and read the inscription.
After his basketball plaque fell off the wall, Joe remounted it with better screws.
Yes I certainly can make a sentence with that word.
how can make the sentence for word mercy
Bill had so much plague on his teeth it took 2 hours to remove all of it.
Corroborative is the hardest word in the world to make a sentence for.
I conclude that it is possible to make a sentence with the word "conclude."
Those letters will spell plaque.
You can make the word stimulate into a sentence by seing what word best goes in front of it.