It is not correct English to say "somebody has learned something from an early age" due to the use of "has".
Sergeants
is my names are a correct English
Yes it is correct english
In the UK, the correct English is known as either Standard English or The Queen's English.
Mommy is correct in American English, Mummy is correct in English.
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
The phrase was incomplete so especially if something that was not in the question preceded or came after what was written it could be correct but I would probably have written: (this was done)... due to an early [or due to an earlier] design requirement and in order to accelerate ... (implementation of...) or
"Correct" in English is corretto in Italian.
it is not correct English, you rather say still
Yes in English, English UK English, Australian English etc - but NO - in American English. In the USA Honors is correct
Yes, saying "that's so true" is correct informal English. It is a common way to agree with someone or acknowledge the accuracy of a statement.