As a basic rule, in a sentence you have to have a syntax and must have:
a subject, a verb and an object.
Therefore, instead of I, you can either:
add an object at first:
Yesterday, I feed my worm.
Or, try to use other subjects
yesterday, the frog was fed by me(passive speaking).You could also say he, she, they, other words for I.
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
This sentence demonstrates an unusual use of syntax by placing the adverb "quickly" at the beginning of the sentence instead of following the verb it modifies. This disrupts the typical word order in English sentences, which is subject-verb-object.
No you can not because you are making a list and so what the topic is who use what happened the most and trun it into a sentence.
So you think that's a difficult question, do you?
Yes, but I wouldn't use also at the beginning of a sentence.
Comma's are the hardest punctuation mark to place in a sentence. A comma can be placed after instead at the beginning of a sentence if the sentence is a continuation of the subject in the one before it.
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
no
no
This sentence demonstrates an unusual use of syntax by placing the adverb "quickly" at the beginning of the sentence instead of following the verb it modifies. This disrupts the typical word order in English sentences, which is subject-verb-object.
Deliberately.
yes
You can do whatever you want Ellipsis is a noun so you can use it at the beginning of a sentence. A ellipsis is often indicated by a set of dots.
In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the Earth.
It's actually notwithstanding, (and not notwothstanding). Anyway, yes, you can use it at the beginning of a sentence.
No you can not because you are making a list and so what the topic is who use what happened the most and trun it into a sentence.
You can use feeling in a sentence by saying spectacular instead of saying good.