How should these be punctuated? Do they require conjunctions and periods technically. (early and ready)
If you watch this, shame on you, whoever you are
If you watch this, shame on you. Whoever you are.
Morning all, up bright and early, ready to start the day.
I have half a pizza, if I divide it in half, how many slices is that.
Does if work as conditional clause marker, and a conjunction depending on context?
For instance:
I have half a pizza and I divide it in half. How many slices is that? versus my other example?
1. and 2. "Whoever you are" should be omitted.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
1. and 2. "Whoever you are" should be omitted. The phrase "whoever you are" is not used like this.
3. This is okay, although the wording is a little unusual. It would have to appear in an appropriate context, and this would not be easy to fit to a proper context. For example: an overly-friendly neighbor greeting his neighbors in the morning (they cringe upon hearing this - they'v