The minuscule amount of water in the cup was not enough to survive on.
Somebody will have to improve on this answer. One similarity between a sentence and a sentence fragment could be a sentence's length. If somebody says, "Who did that?" you could answer, "I did," and that is a sentence... but in a different scenario, that may be considered a sentence fragment. Why? Because if that sentence was all by itself, "I did," would be nonsense. What did "I" do? "I did jump," could then complete it.
This sentence is a sentence or indepedent clause (It has one subject = Bailey and one verb = slept) so that, is a sentence .
The verb in that sentence is "are".
Kochee is not a sentence
The modern English sentence of 'she is married to him' can be translated to the Zulu language. Transliterated the sentence is 'Eseshadile kuya hi.'
A minuscule amount of snow fell.
a minuscule amount of light came through the window
the minuscule mouse went inside a skinny hole.
The minuscule insect buzzed it's way into the hole. The hole in the wall was minuscule compared to the house. I'm feeling minuscule, he thought.
This Smart Car is rather minuscule when compared with this enormous Lambourghini LP560-4.
"She gave me a look that made her eyes seem minisculeafter I told on her."
In the all white room, the minuscule drop of blood really stood out.
The antonyms in that sentence are "enormous" and "minuscule." One means big as a house, the other means small as a pea. So, Mr. Bradshaw's got a giant Saint Bernard and a tiny Chihuahua, talk about a size mismatch!
"Minuscule" is an adjective.
Miniscule means tiny, or minute.The model dollhouse was perfect, down to the last miniscule minuscule detail. [origin of the word is minus]There's just a miniscule minuscule amount of snow falling outside.That pony is miniscule minuscule! It's so cute!
The actual work done by human muscle power is miniscule minuscule by comparison
normally peoples germs are miniscule______________________________As a sentence requires an initial capital (a majuscule) and a terminal punctuation mark -- not to mention (ah, I did) the need for a "possessive" apostrophe in people's and the standard spelling minuscule (not miniscule) -- how about this version:Normally, people's germs are minuscule.Or another example:This sentence, which commences with a majuscule T, is written using mostly minuscules.______________________________