<span>A question of policy asks what course of action should be taken or how a problem should be solved. So I think it should be false.</span>
Answer:
If you are using it to start a new sentance, then yes you can, if not then you don't need to
Explanation:
https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/73524/should-a-capital-letter-be-used-after-an-ellipsis#targetText=If%20so%2C%20what%20follows%20is,the%20sentence%20without%20a%20capital.
This website says what I said up top. "If so, what follows is a new sentence, and it starts with a capital letter. If you think the ellipsis represents a delay within an as-yet-incomplete sentence, but you've decided you don't want indicate that delay using some other punctuation (comma, semicolon, etc.), then just continue the sentence without a capital."
Hope this helps! :)
Answer:
a complete change from the original
Explanation:
hope it helps (Srr if incorrect)
Answer:
He accidentally cut himself while he was chopping the vegetables.
She bought a present for herself.
We helped ourselves to the free drinks at the launch party.
They injured themselves during the rugby match.
I enjoyed myself at the concert.
The dog is scratching itself – it must have fleas!
Ice-cream you scream we all scream for ice cream