The word at is a preposition indicating location or focus.
Examples:
"She was at the store." "The dance was at the auditorium" "They worked hard at solving the problem."
The word seen is the participle form of the verb to see (vision, or understanding, or association)
*the form uses a helper verb such as to be or to have
Examples:
"They were seen together at the bank."
"The process was seen as a breakthrough in manufacturing."
"He has seen the doctor for his problem."
suitably, properly, correctly, fittingly, aptly, applicably
When using the words they and them you have to do so correctly. Both words are used a plurals and this can be difficult. Them is more likely to be the right word to use in a sentence.
Spelled correctly ' 20/25 , which reduces to 4/5 = 80% Spelled incorrectly ' 5/25 ' , whichy reduces to 1/5 = 20%.
Anecdote is used correctly but there is a mismatch between "a company" and "avert" - probably in the tense.
Loaded Words
It tells the computer that you are searching for the main idea + whatever else you are including.
No, the word "homonym" is not used correctly in that sentence. Homonyms are words that sound alike but have different meanings. A better way to phrase the question could be: "How many hours do you have to wait?"
A person has a good sense of the English language when they use it correctly. In order for the English language to be used correctly, a person needs to study it, have an understanding of words, punctuation and grammar.
Yes. That is the correct spelling of ignoring. It is the present participle of the verb to ignore and may be used as a verb or as a noun (gerund). It is virtually never seen as an adjective.
Using expanded words correctly reflects an understanding of grammar details Expanded words are a significant part of good speaking and writing
correctly
The same reason it's important to to pronounce english words correctly. So that people can understand you.