Yes. The court system was notorious for punishment doled out in the past. It continues to dole out punishment and in the future, it will continue to dole it out.
"I have done it". this is the correct English way.
The statement "I am happy for you" is correct whereas "I'm happy to you" is not in English.
No, the correct phrase in English is "separate from family."
No, the correct way to express this is to say "pay attention." "Put attention" is not a grammatically correct phrase in English.
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.
it is not correct English, you rather say still
It is correct.
It would be more correct to say, someone who.
It is correct English to say decent skill but not decent ability
It is correct English to say "He went off on a tangent".
no it is not correct to say you are not for sure instead you can say in proper English that you are not sure about something
No. In English we say "How old are you?"
Yes, it is correct to say out of compliance with. It means out of help with in English grammar.
no you should say "Did you get an A on the English exam?"
Correct is the same as it is in English. It means that it is free from error.
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
In American English we say My family is; in British English we may say My family are.