No, "a lot" is the correct form in written English; "alot" is considered nonstandard and should be avoided.
No, it is not proper grammar. The correct phrasing is "you and I."
Yes, my week is going well. Thank you for asking!
"Into" is used to indicate movement or direction, while "in to" is used when "in" is part of a verb phrase (e.g., "to turn in to the parking lot").
The proper grammar is "There has come a time." "There" is the subject of the sentence and is singular, hence the correct verb form to use is "has" instead of "have."
The proper grammar is "a urinary" because the word "urinary" begins with a consonant sound, even though the first letter is a vowel.
"She did not have" is the proper grammar.
Yes, my week is going well. Thank you for asking!
"Don't it" is not proper grammar. The correct form is "doesn't it".
It is proper grammar to say, "I bet you".
no, that is definitely not proper grammar.
No, it is not proper grammar. The correct phrasing is "you and I."
1. Proper grammar makes you sound intelligent, as if all those years from K-12 were not a waste. 2. How you write and how you talk say a lot about you as a person (yes, people do judge you by the way you write, talk, dress, etc). 3. Proper grammar allows for you to communicate your ideas clearly. These are just three reasons.
"Gotten" is generally considered acceptable American English grammar, but in British English, "got" is typically preferred.
What was there is proper grammar.
There are many grammar practice websites that will help people learn proper English grammar. These are necessary since many people have no idea what proper grammar is these days.
It's you are, you is is not proper grammar.
It's you are, you is is not proper grammar.