are you at the office
Usually you would say that you were at the office, but saying that you were in the office is grammatically correct as well (as long as you are technically in the office building). "I am in office" without the word "the" is only correct if you are currently holding a position which expires (like President or Chair).
Please address all your queries to the following office.
I would tend to say is working in an office.
That is the correct spelling of the past tense verb or adjective "elected" (voted into office).
"It is one of the biggest cities" is correct.
If it is the office of one nurse, this is correct - nurse's office. If it is the office of a group of nurses, this is correct - nurses' office.
principal's office is correct
No, the correct statement would be "Is he at the office?" by adding the article "the" before "office."
I am present in the office today.Today, I am present in the office.
Both could be correct, depending on context
Usually you would say that you were at the office, but saying that you were in the office is grammatically correct as well (as long as you are technically in the office building). "I am in office" without the word "the" is only correct if you are currently holding a position which expires (like President or Chair).
"Out of Office" used to be "Out of Faculty". Microsoft kept using "OOF" when writing about "Out of Office" - so I guess that is the correct term.
you are standing
correct answer is 0. It was a round office
Yes that is a correct sentence, as long as you have identified who "he" is in a previous statement.
The correct sentence is: "Three young pretty ladies dropped by the office."
If you're looking for the grammatically correct way of asking the above question it's 'Are you in an office ?'