It is almost correct. You need to say "a few kilometers distance from our home"--kilometers is plural. You also do not need to say "distance", because you have already established the distance by saying kilometers. So it would be sufficient to say "a few kilometers from our home".
"A few meters away from our home" is not a correct grammar but the correct one is "Few meters away from our home."
Yes, but because of the introductory clause, we add a comma after 'snowing.' Therefore, the sentence becomes this: "Although it was snowing, he walked home." Then it's grammatically correct.
to be home
Not home yet is used more commonly but not yet home is still correct, but it is used in another context.
It is not grammatically correct to say ' you go to home'. Instead you should leave out the word to, and say 'you, go home'.
Yes, "about 1 kilometer away from our home" is grammatically correct.
"A few meters away from our home" is not a correct grammar but the correct one is "Few meters away from our home."
If you are writing possessively, i.e. "Her family's hoiday-home" then it would be correct grammar.
Yes, your grammar is correct. Your sentence "Just take care on your way home" is a polite way to tell someone to be safe while going home.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
The correct grammar is "reminded of why." This construction indicates that the person was reminded of the reason or justification for something.
We say It reminds me why I left. "Of" is used when the object is a noun, as in It reminds me of home
It is correct in a certain context. If you are talking about a Christmas that arrived in the past, that is the correct way to say it.The year was 1945. Another Christmas had come. I was home to enjoy it with my family, but my brother was still stationed overseas.
I shall (or I will) go to the theatre (or a cinema!!!!) and watch a film and then I'll come home (or I'll be coming home).
From the apex of home to the front edge of the pitching rubber.
None of the men were going home. The verb were refers back to the simple subject men. Men were not men was. man was men were