The sentence 'Correct the sentence.' is a correct sentence.
The subject is implied 'you'; the verb is 'correct'; the direct object is 'sentence'; and it is a complete thought. These are all the elements required for a complete sentence.
Pile up stresses between I and my spouse. Demanding life is
It should rather be:
Let Mr. A correct the sentence?
Him and her take ice skating lessons on Wednesday
"Mr. Fields does not take critical of his work very well."The word 'critical' is incorrect. The word 'critical' is an adjective.The word should be a noun as the direct object of the verb 'does take'. The noun form is 'criticism'.The correct sentence is:""Mr. Fields does not take criticism of his work very well."
The stories Mr. Feinstein told, were really scary.
You take the word, and put it in a gramatically correct sentence. :) *HEY NATALIE ;) FROM: BANANA*
The correct word to use in that sentence is advised. Adviced is not defined as a word at all so it should not be used.
no it is not a correct sentence.
The correct way to say the sentence is, "Mr. Jones and he ran the fair."
No, it is not. "Whose client is Mr. Jackso[n]" or "Who is the client of Mr. Jackso[n]" would be correct sentences.
The short answer is: No. The long answer is: As written, the sentence doesn't make sense and I'm having trouble figuring out what it's supposed to mean, so I'll take a guess and suggest a few correct versions:You have discussed this with Mr. Dissanayaka before. (Meaning: You and Mr. D. have talked about this.)Have you discussed this with Mr. Dissanayaka before? (Same as above except in a question form.)You have been discussed with Mr. Dissanayaka before. (Meaning: Mr. D. and someone else have talked about you.)
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
'Mr Ram, accompanied by his friends, was assembled at the lawn' would be grammatically correct.
The relative pronoun is whom, but it is the incorrect case. The relative pronoun 'whom' is the objective case which functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.The correct sentence is, "Mr. Moon who you have met is my assistant."A correct sentence for 'whom' is, "Mr. Moon to whom you were introduced is my assistant."
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
The verb in that sentence is "take". It's not the correct form, though. The correct form is "takes".
Mr and Mrs is correct or Mrs and Mr is correct
No. Should be: Mr Jacob has been appointed ...(assuming it has already happened) Mr Jacobs is being appointed .... (if it is currently happening - this is an unusual though correct construction)
No Did we take your pictures?