The sentence "Her son, to her great surprise, made the Dean's List" shows the best use of the phrase "to her great surprise." Placing the phrase before the action helps to clearly convey the unexpected nature of the event.
There are a few ways you could correctly punctuate this sentence. "Wow! What a great surprise.", shouted Ernesto. "Wow, what a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto. "Wow! What a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto.
To her great surprise, students had planned a surprise party for their teacher's birthday.The mother found, to her great surprise, all of her children in bed and sleeping.
Didn't she do her own homework? She did the work, didn't she?
Any sentence expressing sudden emotion is called exclamatory sentence. accompanied by the ! sign (exclamation point). "Oh, what a shirt!" (surprise) "Alas, he did not survive! (sorrow) * They're sentences that say something sudden, strongly, or with great feeling, rather than saying something simply, and end with an exclamation point (!).
No. It would be "her and me" or "she and I", depending on whether the people in the phrase are the subject or the object. She and I go to concerts together. Our friends gave a great party for her and me.
There are a few ways you could correctly punctuate this sentence. "Wow! What a great surprise.", shouted Ernesto. "Wow, what a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto. "Wow! What a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto.
To her great surprise, students had planned a surprise party for their teacher's birthday.The mother found, to her great surprise, all of her children in bed and sleeping.
"Wow, what a great surprise!" shouted Ernesto.
The revelation that he was the winner was greeted with great surprise.
The phrase "Great Scott" is used to denote surprise. The origin is not definitively known, but one possible explanation is that it relates to Civil War Commander Winfield Scott.
The Great Depression was a horrible time in history.
What a great surprise!
"I am suave, suave I am" is a great self-affirmation phrase.
The prepositional phrase is in a great maze.A prepositional phrase is a group of words beginning with a preposition, for example:on the tableunder the weatherout of the bluefrom under the car
If I think I know what you you are talking about, it is the simple predicate. Were is the helping verb here to the main verb imprisoned, but the entire phrase were imprisoned is considered the simple predicate.Please recommend me!
swimming in the ocean
Didn't she do her own homework? She did the work, didn't she?