The number of sentences in an article can vary depending on the length and complexity of the content. Typically, an article can range from a few sentences to several paragraphs.
Here are three sentences including the word 'article': "Nina wrote an article for the newspaper about growing flowers." "I read your article in the magazine about trees." "Not many people read Jenny's article in the school newspaper, because they found it boring."
Here are three sentences including the word 'article': "Nina wrote an article for the newspaper about growing flowers." "I read your article in the magazine about trees." "Not many people read Jenny's article in the school newspaper, because they found it boring."
I've never seen that kind of article before in a newspaper.
She learned a lot when she read the article. The magazine article was about parenting.
The first part of an article is the abstract which usually summarises the main idea of the article or drafts up the debated issue.
An article, such as "A" or "The" may generally be used to start sentences.
Sentence pattern: noun+ linking verb+noun
"Time" is the subject, "is" is the verb, and "money" is the predicate nominative. There is no article (a, an, the) in that sentence.
Of course! Please provide the article or main points you would like me to summarize.
The definite article is 'the' in all sentences or where ever it is used. It's the only definite article in English.
Wikipedia provides many sources for every article. The small numbers written in superscripts at the end of many of the sentences provide links to reliable sources.
The only likely word is paragraph, a group of sentences within an essay or article.