No. It has no subject. It needs to start with "I".
Yes, 'I hope that you were sincere when you gave me the advice.' is a correct sentence.
The clause / sentence has no meaning out of context. If it is a response, the somewhat archaic but correct construction is "I am fine, as I hope you are as well." You would not use the words "too" and "as well" in the same clause as that is redundant.
Yes, it is.
No. You should have a subject eg I hope you ............. But without knowing the context this sentence is not correct.
You need to separate your question from the sentence you are asking about, but if the sentence you are asking about is "You hope that your family will return home safely." then the answer is "Yes." I would phrase your question as follows: Is this sentence grammatically correct? "You hope that your family will return home safely."
this sentence would read, "Rewrite this sentence using correct capitalization holidays in November" hope that helps
I hope you really wanted the word "this" used in a sentence. This is a word that indicates an item or a location. This is the correct package. This is the correct street to turn right.
The use of "hopefully" to mean something like "it is hoped" or " we hope" is not good. Better to say "We hope..." or "With any luck..." Otherwise the sentence is correct, if a little vague.
Have a pleasent Holidays
34 hope youre close
it's what youre going to keep the same and one thing youre going to change HOPE THAT WORK
Yes. However, saying ' I hope you enjoyed my show. ' Sounds more casual. Unless you're going for a more professional sounding sentence.