The number two comes after the number one.
Either 1) make the sentence two sentences 2) add a semi-colon or colon, where appropriate 3) add the correct conjunction to join the two thoughts
Using the word add in a sentence. Well, I would add the word add to the sentence by doing this: saying like what does the word Add mean? Well, your question is still a sentence. So anything with the word add is the sentence. Hope this helped.
You would need to add two commas to the sentence. It would read: "There will be, Alice, Bob, Carol, David, and Erin, on the committee."
"Add that to my shopping cart please," said Little Jack to his mom.
In the sentence Then they add flour and some salt,the adjective is some
I will not add you unless you apologize
No, a sentence can have multiple prepositional phrases. Prepositional phrases add detail and information to a sentence, and there is no set limit to how many can be included in a sentence as long as it remains grammatically correct and clear.
By cds, I assume you mean compact disks. If so, you need to capitalize CD and add a lowercase s (CDs). No, the two CDs is not a grammatically correct sentence. At the very least, a sentence needs a subject and a verb. You have the subject; you need a verb. Two CDs are stuck in the CD player.
As tall as she. In a sentence, you use 'I am as tall as she'. After the 'she', there is actually an 'is'. However, it is redundant so you do not add it into a sentence. So the sentence 'I am as tall as she' is actually 'I am as tall as she is', but only without the 'is'.
Just add how, what, oh and etc.. before the sentence
No, you do not add another period after "Jr." at the end of a sentence. The period after "Jr." serves as both an abbreviation marker and as the end of the sentence.
an appositive doesn't add clauses to a sentence