I love all of them!
I believe the correct structure would be "I love them all."
I had a basked of apples, but Billy to them all.
Yes. Example: "Can you give this to them?"
I think yes
The sentence is correct exactly the way it is: "One of these disks is for you and Adam." "Is" is the correct form of the verb "to be" in this sentence, because its subject is "one," which takes the singular form of the verb. Note that if the sentence had started with "these disks," that would require a plural verb, and the correct form would be "These disks are for you and Adam."
a to z this letters form a one sentence
An adjective or a pronoun, depending on sentence structure.
The verb in this sentence is 'walk', but the form it takes is incorrect for this sentence. A few sentences with the correct form of 'walk' could be: The cat walks slowly. (present tense form). The cat is walking slowly. (present progressive form) The cat walked slowly. (past tense form)
Give atleast two examples in sentence form of each of the 7 Cs?
The form of this sentence is correct. She filled out the application form.
No, "Is felt" is not the correct form in the sentence. The correct form would be "She replied that she felt better."
You need to interpret the words of the sentence into an algebraic form.
The plural form of "do" is "do" and the plural form of "don't" is "don't." These words do not change in the plural form when used in a sentence.
No, the correct sentence would be: "Is the sculpture free form?"
periodic sentence and loose or cumulative sentence
The plural of "sentence" is "sentences."
We use are when the sentence is in plural and is when the sentence is in singular form.
No can you?
The sculpture was free-form. This is a correct sentence if you capitalize first letter.
Can I use colonists in a sentence or Can I form a sentence with colonists in it? Yes.
i just need a sentence not in a question form