No. It should be either "Ricky Martin was a singing sensation," or "Ricky Martin is now a singing sensation."
"Was" is past tense and should probably not be combined with "now".
Martin is here again.
You are correct.
The cast of The Film Sensation - 1914 includes: Martin Ems as Martin
he is singing
No. The correct spelling is Aston Martin.
The correct idiom for the sentence would be "Martin had the answer on the tip of his tongue but Lucy said it first." This idiom means someone was about to provide an answer but another person beat them to it.
No. You would say "Martin and I."
Martin Juritsch has written: 'Sinn und Geist' -- subject(s): Perception, Psychophysiology, Senses and sensation
It's Baritone
Both are correct. Blessed can be used in the past, present or future tense. Thus, Martin will be blessed with a baby boy, is also correct.
Chris Martin is the lead vocalist
Linda Martin for Ireland, singing "Why Me?"