The letter "W" should be capitalized and followed by a period, because it is taken from his middle name, a proper noun. Another possible error is that, if written today, "is" should be changed to "was", because Mr. Bush is not the current President.
One way to move the modifier in this sentence is to say: "He was unquestionably occupied with making sure his sister did not repeat the same error, otherwise."
The sentence "The book on the table is have many pictures" has an error in subject-verb agreement. The verb "have" should be replaced with "has" to match the singular subject "book."
There is no pronoun error in that sentence.
The proofreading mark for an error in a sentence would be a caret (^) to indicate where the correction should be inserted.
"How should the sentence above be rewritten to correct the subject-verb agreement error?"
Uncle George's
It is a transposition error. 13 should be 31.
Run/on
One way to move the modifier in this sentence is to say: "He was unquestionably occupied with making sure his sister did not repeat the same error, otherwise."
The sentence seems to be incomplete or has a typographical error. It is not clear what "oil were once rock s" is trying to convey. If you provide more context or correct the sentence, I can help you understand it better.
The word containing a capitalization error in the sentence is "Oregon." It should be capitalized as "Oregon" because it is a proper noun referring to a specific state. The corrected sentence should read: "On Sunday we flew from Portland, Oregon, to Lake Tahoe."
The sentence "The book on the table is have many pictures" has an error in subject-verb agreement. The verb "have" should be replaced with "has" to match the singular subject "book."
identify the error in the following sentence each of musical selections were chosen by students conductors 1a misplaced modifier 2a pronoun agreement error 3 a spelling error 4a subject -verb agreement error
What is a notice of sentencing error motion
Antonyms for the noun 'error' are the following nouns:accuracycorrectnessperfectioncorrection
The sentence should be,"You should have written."
Yes, there is an error.