The correct sentence is the following:
"What were you doing from before?"
A correct way to ask this question is, "What were you doing before?"
There are different ways to write this sentence. The best way to write it would be "What were you doing before this"?
To locate the subject of a sentence, identify who or what the sentence is about. The subject is usually a noun or pronoun that performs the action of the sentence. Look for the main verb in the sentence and ask "Who or what is doing the action?" to determine the subject.
No, "hows you" is not correct grammar. The correct way to ask that question would be "How are you?" or "How are you doing?"
To find the subject of a sentence, identify who or what the sentence is about. The subject is typically a noun or pronoun that performs the action of the sentence. Look for the main verb in the sentence, and ask who or what is doing that action. That will be your subject.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be: "Do you wish for our love to continue?"
There are different ways to write this sentence. The best way to write it would be "What were you doing before this"?
To locate the subject of a sentence, identify who or what the sentence is about. The subject is usually a noun or pronoun that performs the action of the sentence. Look for the main verb in the sentence and ask "Who or what is doing the action?" to determine the subject.
No, ask is in the incorrect tense. The correct tense is asked. I ask. He asked. Ted asked.
No, "hows you" is not correct grammar. The correct way to ask that question would be "How are you?" or "How are you doing?"
Well, it's almost correct. But since it asks a question, it should end in a question mark (?). I would also call it an interrogative sentence rather than a demonstrative sentence.
To find the subject of a sentence, identify who or what the sentence is about. The subject is typically a noun or pronoun that performs the action of the sentence. Look for the main verb in the sentence, and ask who or what is doing that action. That will be your subject.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be: "Do you wish for our love to continue?"
No!"You look forward to doing business with you" would be grammatically correct.I assume that you really wanted to ask whether "I look forward to do business with you" is correct and this brain-dead web site insisted on changing "I" to "you." Even in this case, you should change "to do" into "to doing."I look forward to doing business with you.If you really meant to ask about "You look forward to do business with you," then you should change "to do" into "to doing" to fix the grammar and change the second "you" into "yourself" to make the sentence clearer.You look forward to doing business with yourself.
that is not the wright question i ask
It depends on how they are used in a sentence.When it is the subject, or doing something, you use 'I."Example: I went shopping this morning.When it is an object, or someone is doing or giving something to you, you use "me."Examples: My mom kissed me. My brother gave me a gift.
Yes it is. The sentence "This will be an exciting month for me" is absolutely correct (it needs a period at the end, of course). But "a correct grammar" is not-- you want to ask whether it is "grammatically correct," or to be simpler, ask whether it is "good English."
Yes, it is typically a word that we use to politely ask someone to do something.