Is it until or untill?
It is until, not untill.
The preposition and subordinating conjunction “until” is spelled with one “l.”
QuillBot’s free Grammar Checker will help you avoid common typos like “untill” instead of “until.”
It is until, not untill.
The preposition and subordinating conjunction “until” is spelled with one “l.”
QuillBot’s free Grammar Checker will help you avoid common typos like “untill” instead of “until.”
When used as an interrogative to form a question, “what” refers to an (essentially) unlimited set of options, while “which” refers to a narrower or limited set. For example:
The choice of “what” or “which” often depends on the context of the sentence.
An independent clause has a subject and a verb and can stand on its own as a complete sentence (e.g., “Puppies are playful”).
A dependent clause must be joined with an independent clause because it does not express a complete thought (e.g., “Puppies are playful because they have a lot of energy”).
Dependent clauses are marked by the use of subordinating conjunctions (e.g., “because,” “although,” “while”) or relative pronouns (e.g., “that,” “which,” “who”).
In a compound predicate, two (or more) verbs share one subject (e.g., “Tan sings and dances very well”).
A compound sentence has two (or more) separate subjects that act on two (or more) separate verbs (e.g., “Tan sings, and Lina dances”).
The part of speech of the word like can be a preposition, conjunction, verb, or noun.
Need help identifying the part of speech of “like” in a specific sentence? Why not ask QuillBot’s free AI Chat to help you?
Both restrictive clauses and nonrestrictive clauses are types of relative clauses (or adjective clauses), which act as adjectives in sentences to describe nouns or pronouns.
Nonrestrictive clauses are set off from the rest of the sentence by commas. Restrictive clauses should not be set off by commas.