It appears the sentence is incomplete or missing context. "She would have come correct" can imply that she would have behaved appropriately or accurately in a given situation.
No, the correct grammar would be "More birthdays to come."
The correct sentence is "I come from" as it indicates your place of origin or where you are currently from. "I came from" would be correct if you are referring to a past event of where you came from.
"Have come" is correct. "Came" is the past tense of "come," so in this case, the correct form is "have come" when used with a helping verb.
'When did I come' is correct. In this sentence, the verb 'come' should be in its base form 'come' after the auxiliary verb 'did'.
No, the correct phrasing would be "Her friends came home yesterday."
No, the correct grammar would be "More birthdays to come."
The correct sentence is "I come from" as it indicates your place of origin or where you are currently from. "I came from" would be correct if you are referring to a past event of where you came from.
The correct sentence would read: "You came home the latest," or "You are the last to come home."
"It has come" is correct. "Has come" is the present perfect tense, which is used to talk about something that happened at an unspecified time in the past and has relevance to the present. "Came" is the simple past tense, which is used for actions that happened at a specific time in the past.
No, because "let's" means "let us", and it does not make sense to say "let us join us." It would be correct to say, "Come on, let's join them." It would also be correct, if you are speaking to someone outside your group, to say, "Come on, join us."
No. You could say 'you could have come yesterday', or 'you would have come yesterday', or 'if you had come yesterday', though.
"Have come" is correct. "Came" is the past tense of "come," so in this case, the correct form is "have come" when used with a helping verb.
'When did I come' is correct. In this sentence, the verb 'come' should be in its base form 'come' after the auxiliary verb 'did'.
It is not correct. The correct sentence should be as follows: "At what time would you come?" or 'At what time would you like to come?" or "At what time will you come?" or "would you come at what time?" or "Will you come at what time?" or "At what time will you like to come?" The verb 'should' is not used while asking questions since should is used a modal verb--which does not change its form with first, second or third person nouns or pronouns--used sparingly almost in imperative sentences and in sentences that suggestive of advice.
No, it is not correct. I contains a very common mistake of using "I" as an object when it is part of a compound object (of the preposition "with"). "I" is correct as a subject; "me" is correct as an object. The easiest way to determine whether to use "I" or "me" is to try the same sentence with "I" or "me" alone--leaving "my friends" out of it for this test. You would say, "Can you come with me to Central Park?" You would never say, "Can you come with I to Central Park?" This tells you that you need to use the objective form, "me": "Can you come with my friends and me to Central Park?" No it's correct
No, the correct phrasing would be "Her friends came home yesterday."
The correct sentence is 'I will come home at 3pm'.