Electric wire sheathing should not project more than one inch into the electric panel.
Electrical wire sheathing should not project more than about one inch into the electric panel.
'Until the class begins' is not a complete sentence, and therefore it can not be classified. It is a clause, introduced by the conjunction 'until.' 'Until the class begins' is not a complete thought. We're still waiting for the rest of the sentence. Something will or will not happen, take place, be allowed, etc., 'until the class begins.' Without that something being stated, there is not a complete thought. It takes a complete thought to make a sentence. 'The class begins' is a complete sentence. It sounds like an announcement of some kind. It is perhaps a little awkward or stilted, but it is a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought. Furthermore, it is a declarative sentence. It states a fact.
tastey
"In many languages the word for mother" is the complete predicate in the sentence. It includes the verb "begins" and provides information about where the sound "ma" appears in different languages.
Phrase is a word ended with a period but not completely a sentence while sentence has a complete thought. It begins with capital letter and ends with a punctuation mark or period.
the author's voice sounds more confident
regular speech
No, because it does not have a subject and verb. For example, "under the mat" is a prepositional phrase, but it is not a sentence. An example of a sentence that contains a prepositional phrase is "The key is under the mat."
· blender
Punctuation is sentences improves the ability of a reader to detect clues about how to read the sentence. This includes the use of a period at the end of a sentence, and the use of a capital letter to begin the next sentence.
In formal writing you would not begin a sentence with because, therefore, the kind of sentence that begins with because is informal.
power source