Yes.
Yes, that is a correct and polite way to acknowledge someone for informing you about something. It shows gratitude and respect for the communication.
Yes, it is extremely polite to tell someone "thanks for letting me know." Even if the information they provide isn't necessarily useful for you at that given moment, telling someone that you appreciate the effort they put in to finding an answer for you is the right way to go about it.
Yes, the sentence "you won" is correct. It is a complete statement indicating that someone has achieved victory in a competition or situation. The phrase is informal but grammatically sound.
When someone says "you hit the nail on the head," they mean that your statement or observation is accurate and precise. It implies that you have made a correct assessment or diagnosis about a situation or issue.
No. The "for" is wrong. "The Blessing of" is better.
The correct spelling is someone.
yes, if someone is abusing it then they are not letting someone their rights
It's correct English but not very good English
The statement is incorrect. The correct phrasing would be "I persuaded him to join the gym." The verb "persuade" means to convince someone to do something, while "prevail" typically refers to winning or being victorious in a situation rather than convincing someone.
It's still gonna hurt but if you truely love them, you want them to be happy. If them being with someone else is what lakes them happy then letting them go will make it easier than holding on.
It is grammatically correct to say it is the time for someone and not it is the time of someone.
providing is giving to or letting someone have...an letting them us it because thay dont have it with them orr dont have it at all..... by shaneka