I haven't been able to answer a single question before now. That means that you haven't answered a singe question yet, until now, where you recently answered a question.
Like this: I did my history homework yesterday. That's how you use yesterday as an adverb in a sentence
i can not endure this anymore. It has been a million years now.
bla
carpetbaggers are awsome
My sentence is: cou d' etat is a French sentance. Also: You wrote a sentence using it in your question
The committee has approved our proposal, so now we can present it before their interest group.
The sentence is.... I used surtax in a sentence just now.
Kapiti was a place for women, men, and children lived before it was founded. It is now part of New Zealand.
You use he or she when you already have referred to a person in a sentence before, or earlier in the same sentence.
no
I don't now
There is not rule that says you must use a comma before the word you exclusively. You would have to use a comma if the sentence would require one. Now if you were writing down the slang of 'you are' you would write it like this; you're. There must have been a sentence example for your homework assignment and your teacher wanted to know if you needed to use a comma in that sentence. Here is an example of the correct usage of the comma. I celebrate Easter, you don't, but I do every year.
Before is to past as after is to future.
You use a when its before a word that starts with a consonant and use an when its before a word that starts with a vowel
you will use it in a sentence like this, ex: I'm so filled with fury right now.
not usually. What is the sentence?
"Before" is an adverb, just like "again"' Take this sentence as an example. "I've seen this movie before." In this sentence "before" is modifying the understood word "now".