As tall as she. In a sentence, you use 'I am as tall as she'. After the 'she', there is actually an 'is'. However, it is redundant so you do not add it into a sentence. So the sentence 'I am as tall as she' is actually 'I am as tall as she is', but only without the 'is'.
No, superlatives (tallest) are used to compare two or more things. comparatives (taller) are used to compare two things. since we are talking of two girls, taller is appropriate.
No. It is correct to say, "He received the letter two days ago."
Two. Tall-est.
Yes, it certainly is correct. eg 4 is the lesser of 4 and 6 ---- It does depend on what you mean. "Lesser" involves only two choices; if you have more than two, it's "least."
'Once in a while' (two words) is correct.
'Two pairs of pants' is correct.
Who is the taller of the two? Jack is the taller of the two
The correct phrase is "two girls' coats" to indicate that the coats belong to two girls. Adding the apostrophe after the "s" indicates possession by a plural noun.
The two tallest buildings in Mississippi are two casinos Biloxi: The Beau Rivage is the tallest and the Imperial Palace is the second tallest.
I am not sure between those two options, but I really matters on the way you are trying to say it. If you are saying it to the jockey players- You girls were playing hockey. If you are the girls playing hockey- We girls were playing hockey. Hope this helps!
perpectly correct
The correct sentence with the apostrophe placed is: "The two girls' bicycles were stolen." The apostrophe goes after the word "girls" to indicate possession by the girls.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "I am the mother of two children."
yes
yep
Two lynxes is the correct term.
Ostrich is the tallest egg laying two legged creature
Wednesday morning, it is correct to say I have not seen him for one day. Wednesday afternoon, or by working day end, it is correct to say I have not seen him for two days