• Of course, a sentence can be longer and more complicated, but basically there is always a subject and a predicate.
  • A sentence consists of a subject, a verb, and sometimes an object, and it always ends with a punctuation mark (period, question mark, or exclamation mark).
  • A sentence in grammar is a set of semantically arranged words and conveys a complete thought.
  • There are four types of sentences in English grammar all off which can be formed in the affirmative or the negative.
  • The definition of the sentence identifies that a sentence consists of more than one word containing at least a subject and a predicate.
  • The above lines are a good example of an interrogative sentence in which the author has reversed the normal word order, and used a question mark at the end of...
  • That sentences in Authors, like haires in an horse-taile, concurre in one root of beauty and strength, but being pluckt out one by one, serve onely for springes and...
  • A sentence, whether short or long, must express a complete idea; and a complete sentence must consist of at least one independent clause—that is, a...
  • A simple sentence is a basic sentence that contains a subject and a verb. ... Simple sentences can be made longer by adding more information to them.
  • (noun) A philosophical or theological opinion; a dogma; as, Summary of the Sentences; Book of the Sentences.