this is grammatically incorrect: 'does he a teacher' is stating that he 'does' a teacher. there is no such usage in correct English other than that of slang, and would imply a sexual connotation.
The sentence is incorrect. It should be "Is he a teacher?" to form a proper question with the subject ("he") before the verb ("is").
The incorrect word in the sentence is "whos." It should be spelled as "whose." The correct sentence would be: "Whose book is this?"
If you combine two independent clauses (two sentences) into one sentence, you need to use a comma and a conjunction. Right: I am hungry, and I am tired. Right: I am hungry, but I am not going to eat. Wrong: I am hungry and I am cold. Wrong: I am hungry, I am cold. You could also use a semicolon if the two thoughts are closely related. If you use a semicolon, do not use a conjunction. Right: I am hungry; I am going to eat. Wrong: I am hungry; and I am going to eat.
The correct sentence is "Does she go to the market?"
The sentence "All of the clues were carefully hidden by your teacher" is a passive sentence because the subject ("all of the clues") is being acted upon by the verb ("were hidden").
This sentence is in the passive voice. In active voice, it would be "The teacher confiscated the toy."
Dont ever tell a teacher that they are wrong!
The teacher retracted her statement after she knew she was wrong.
Her hypothesis was wrong, and the teacher marked her entire assignment wrong because of it.
"You can start a sentence with a quote," the teacher said, "and there is certainly nothing wrong with doing so."
Examples of using the word wrong in a sentence include: The teacher marked the student's example sentences as being wrong. Often, wrong answers lead us to find the right answers. Sometimes, wrong answers means we've asked the wrong questions. Questions are never wrong, unless they are the kind that violate someone else's privacy or are asked just to embarrass someone. "You're wrong!" Johnny yelled at his younger sister. "I'll show you how to do it right!"
No, that's incorrect. The sentence is, "It is coffee."
SENTENCE: My heavy table isn't movable. My teacher marked me right on this so, it has to be right.
If she knew that you had plagiarised this sentence, your teacher should get into a right lather.
nope :)
The verb tell does not take the preposition to. Omit the word to and the sentence would be okay.
The predicate of being right is wrong !
it is must for me as a sentence right or wrong