The sentence above does not use correct grammar and should be rewritten as the following: Thanks to the rain, I am going to sleep very well this evening.
The sentence "Thanks to rain and its cold at once, it's going to be a good sleep for me this evening" is grammatically correct. However, it may sound more natural if you say "Thanks to the rain and the cold weather, I should sleep well this evening."
Only in the south.
Yes, "be singing" is grammatically correct when used in a progressive verb form to indicate an action that is ongoing or expected to happen in the future. For example, "She will be singing at the concert tomorrow."
No. The term "gonna" is slurred-speech slang for "going to", which should be used instead.
other than the fact that the question should be in quotation marks, id say yes. the questions seems to be grammatically correct
No, tenses - The thrill has gone. The thrill is going.
The sentence "They going sightseeing" is not grammatically correct. The correct forms would be: "They are going sightseeing" or "They are going to go sightseeing."
The correct form is 'so are you'. Example: I am going to the beach and so are you.A quick referencesingular:I am...You are...He is...She is...It is...plural:We are...You are...They are...
I would say; She's going shopping. Or She's going grocery shopping. We don't want to be too wordy.
"Thanks for not smoking" is correct. The implied meaning is "thanks for YOUR not smoking." Compare this to, "I appreciate your going to the store for me," rather than, "I appreciate you going to the store for me." The first one is correct, although you hear many people use the second version.
I am going to take an intelligent guess. Is it 76.8? Am i Correct. Thanks A lot Medunno
Using “I” is perfectly correct here, as John and I are the people who “are going to eat” – in other words, we are the subjects of the sentence. It would not, however, be correct to say, “John and me are going to eat fish pie at home this evening”.