"Your birthday is on a Sunday next year." The prepositional phrase in this sentence is "on a Sunday."
The last word of a prepositional phrase is called the "object of the preposition." It is the noun or pronoun that the preposition relates to the rest of the sentence.
A sentence that asks a question is called an interrogative sentence.
A sentence with a question mark at the end is called an interrogative sentence.
The company billed the client for services rendered last month. The construction team will begin to build the new office building next week.
A lead-out sentence provides a transition from your last idea to your next idea. It could be the last sentence in one "body" paragraph, and it draws your reader naturally to the first sentence of your next body paragraph.
That's called a "widow." If your paragraph has the last sentence on the next page, it's called an "orphan."
The last sentence of the entire essay, because you're concluding the entire thing. The first sentence of the last paragraph is called the introduction to the conclusion. (Complicated, right? :P)
Whether it is one word or a phrase, the term is "anaphora".
The next Book is called the Last Olympian. NO if's or buts.
connectors of sequence
my last year
It is correct, but it is not normal in North American English. It means the second to last (or next to last) sentence.The sentence should start with the article 'the', designating 'last' as a specific thing: The last but one.Examples:The last customer but one. (there is one more person to be waited on)The last cookie but one. (this cookie leaves one remaining)The last train but one. (the next to the last train for this period)
People think the last word of the sentence is booty
The next sentence is a lie because it is not a sentence, it has no verb. So, the first sentence is also a lie because there is no 'next sentence'.
I shall await your next instruction. The last-minute instruction was crucial to our success.
The last Olympian is the last book. A new series is beginning after that, the first of which called the lost Hero