Quote:
Originally Posted by forzfed No wonder you failed Calculus, you don't know proper English!  And that sentence should say..... Because of his cartoonish behavior, I knew that I had to end his existence.
Due, represents a time. The project was due at 4:00pm on Monday May 19, 2008. |
Grammatically, it's fine to start a sentence with "Because" in a construction like this one: "Because...codes" here is a subordinate clause (that is, it couldn't stand on its own as a sentence) that introduces the main part of the sentence (everything after the comma). When teachers warn us against starting sentences with "Because," it's to prevent us from winding up with sentence fragments, which can easily result from punctuating in the wrong place.