A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
No, the sentence "I thought so" is not an interrogative sentence. It is a declarative sentence expressing the speaker's belief or opinion. An interrogative sentence is one that asks a question.
No, the sentence "Judge a man by his words not his actions" is not an assertive sentence. It is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction.
A sentence that asks a question is called an interrogative sentence.
The subject in the sentence is "you."
The Russians claim that the American story of sending a man to moon is specious.
Specious means "misleading in appearance, or something that may seem plausible at first but isn't true or accurate." Following is a use of "specious" in sentence: "The thief had a specious argument, and soon people realized he was the guilty party."
Specious is used to describe something that sounds true or plausible but is not: The Area 51 theorists use some very specious arguments to validate their assumptions.
My esteemed colleague is using the specious argument that his client could not control himself because he was under the influence of a twinkie; clearly he wants us to coddle murderers.
Specious is an adjective.
The flirty teen told the officer a specious story about her car accident, because she did not want to tell the truth about how she'd run off the road into the ditch while texting on her cell phone.
( sa pi ish ) = specious
write about the specious of ersinial fotida?
"Specious" means "seemingly well-reasoned, plausible and true, but actually untrue".
A specious argument is one that is deliberately created to deceive the unknowing by presenting "facts" that seem plausible but which are primarily wrong. The 2K scare was based on specious arguments made by people who hopped on the bandwagon to make a buck via books, lectures, etc. In retrospect, their arguments, while sounding plausible, were based on erroneous ideas, and in some cases, were deliberately deceptive. Because of its narrow definition, "specious" is a word we don't hear often, and when we do, it usually modifies the word "argument".
amphibian
No. In fact the statement: "A specious argument is one in which a great deal of space is given for alternative p[oints of view" is an example of a specious statement. At first sight it looks plausible. But when you think about it, it is incorrect. And THAT is whar specious means.