yes
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
Not really. The "under development scheme" is particularly wrong.
a masters.I have done a masters in English.But I think completed is a better verb than done and also add degree.I have completed a masters degree in English.
Yes, it is- you can use that as a sentence by itself. "I" is the subject, "am" is the verb, and "done" is the past participle of the verb "do", used in this sentence as a predicate adjective modifying "I".
There is no grammatical reason to capitalize every word in a sentence. It may sometimes be done as someone's attempt at emphasis, but it is never grammatically correct.
The grammatically correct sentence would be: Did you make a mess? I made a mess. You made a mess. A mess is made, not done.
To correct a dangling participle, you should clarify the noun that the participle is modifying in the sentence. This can be done by rephrasing the sentence, moving the participle closer to the noun it should modify, or adding a subject for the participle. This helps to ensure that the sentence is grammatically correct and conveys the intended meaning clearly.
In this sentence, a more correct version would be "the war is over" or "the war has ended."
Technically yes, however the words "that are" prior to the word "done should be deleted.
It makes sense, but it is not grammatically correct.I would have done it if you had told me sooner.No, no and no. Never use "would have" in an if-clause! Use had: I would have done it if you had told me.
I think that this is a riddle; that this is too easy; that something must have been left out of the question; that I should not even bother; that the author of the question doesn't know how easy it is; thatthis answer is grammatically correctly; that this answer is done.