No.
She is working.
She has been working.
Working for a company is the fair and the correct answer for this question.
No, you can say 1.Working as a teacher 2.As I work as a teacher
No 'Neither Bill or Susan say that the stove was working'
No, not quite. You should say: I look forward to working with you in the future.
Wednesday morning, it is correct to say I have not seen him for one day. Wednesday afternoon, or by working day end, it is correct to say I have not seen him for two days
the correct answer is: I am interested in working....
That is a correct phrasing, possibly "all of you" if more than one person.
"We look forward to working with you." Is a correct sentence.
If you are going to be a co-worker or working alongside the other person, say "working." If you are a plastic surgeon or are planning to do something to the other person's body, say "work."
if you are talking about your boss specifically or if you are working with a sole employer you say employed by. If you are talking about a business as a whole you say employed at.
Michael Thurman is all about weight loss. So you could say he is working to correct years of bad habits that have caused people to become overweight.
Yes. It is correct to say an abode.