What grading program will Mr. Livingston use?
Mygradebook.com-This is an interactive program whereby Parents & students can access their grading information.Back to Top Sentence structure?Sentences A sentence is a group of words that says a complete thought. It must contain a subject and a predicate. The subject is the person or thing a sentence is talking about. “Elvis is still alive.” (Elvis is the subject.) The predicate is what the sentence is saying about the subject. “The baby played the piano.” (played the piano is the predicate.). There are four kinds of purposes for sentences: Declarative, interrogative, and imperative, and exclamatory. A declarative sentence makes a statement or declaration. It ends with a period. “The aliens landed and took my dog’s supper dish away with them.” An interrogative sentence: asks a question and ends with a question mark. Sometimes it’s in transposed order. “Is that my left elbow or yours?” An imperative sentence commands or requests and ends with a period. (The subject is usually the word “