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"Starting sentence" is not a grammatically correct phrase. A more appropriate phrase would be "opening sentence" or "beginning of the sentence." Example: The opening sentence of the essay immediately captured the reader's attention.
Exact(2)
There's the mixing of high and low language the phrase "cool dude" butts up against the inevitable "hegemony". Then there's the word "perhaps," starting sentence after sentence.
Come up with a good starting sentence.
Similar(58)
Way to go!" But she did not like my starting sentences with "and," saying that the second sentence sounded "tacked on".
So, starting sentences with so No interviewee on TV or radio is able to answer a question without prefacing it with "So".
9. Starting sentences with "obviously" or "as everyone knows" demonstrates your intellectual superiority.
Consider using bullet points and starting sentences or phrases with statements in bold so the reader quickly grasps the point.
The minister started stuttering and starting sentences without completing them.
I'm not "staring at the sky" or starting sentences with "I want to be" or "I wish".
One, starting sentences with "Let's face it" is about the coolest thing a writer can do.
In addition to starting sentences, capital letters should also be at the start of both proper nouns and titles.
Avoid starting sentences with anything along the lines of "And at that moment I knew" or "I learned that... .......
More suggestions(4)
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com