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Only if used in conversational syntax. It is not proper if you just have it be a sentence without the preceding sentence state a fact. For example,

# first person says fact or conjecture. "The sky is blue." # Second person wants to know why. "Why?" The entire predicate spans across two sentences. as long as the subject (sky) and predicate verb (is blue) are present in the preceding sentence, than it is grammatically correct. But is frowned upon to use non conversationally unless using rhetoric.

This is only to show hypocrisies or give a reason. Why? Because otherwise we would be causing disruption, not added voice, to the work.

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16y ago

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Which response is correct 'how come' or 'how comes'?

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For the same reason that you asked, "Why can nobody..." instead of the more grammatically correct, "Why is it that nobody on this website can..."


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There is no grammatical reason to capitalize every word in a sentence. It may sometimes be done as someone's attempt at emphasis, but it is never grammatically correct.


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