Well, it depends if you think God is a Grammar Nazi or not. I suppose if you studied English or Linguistics, and you were to address you Lord and Maker with improper grammar, you might be sent to Hell on mere principle, but that would require you to have a very angry, bitter god. Do you think He has time to sit around correcting your prayers every night?
Seriously, though. If one of the major players in the Christian church was illiterate (Saint Peter), I don't think God cares so much about your grammar as about your belief. Everything in Christianity points towards a *very* forgiving, loving god who encourages people to accept him, and be saved. Worry more about the thoughts and beliefs behind your words, not the words themselves.
Yes it is bad grammar. It should be your sister and I.
Dysgrammatophobia is the fear of bad grammar.
Yes
the correct grammar is "why IS butter bad for you"
I suggest making them feel bad about having bad grammar, and tell them they would look smarter if they used their grammar correctly.
if you use it like "You have done something sinful" it means you have done something wrong; Bad; a no-no[o.o] or if someone actually calls you sinful it means you have done bad things such as steal or something basically sin means a wrong sinful means it is wrong[NOT like right and wrong] or full of sin. [cough] odd question to ask [cough]
No, but apparently noodles are bad for grammar.
Condoms *are* good, but your grammar is bad.
"Got to" can be considered informal or colloquial grammar, but it is commonly used in spoken English to mean "have to" or "must." It is important to use proper grammar in formal writing and professional communication, but in casual conversation, "got to" is widely accepted.
Hebrews is just bad grammar, not bad religion.
Just practice your grammar (i.e. write essays, etc.) until your friend/mum/dad says its ok. And that question's grammar is so bad that i think that you should practice your grammar everyday for one year.
The correct grammar is you "felt bad". :)