It is correct English to say "He went off on a tangent".
It would be "he told" if you are using simple past tense. As in: "He told me his name was Bob." Or "he had told" if you want the past perfect tense. As in: "He had told her to lock the door before he went to work."
Technically yes, but in common usage the words "brushed" or "rubbed" or "bumped" would more usually be used, depending on the exact meaning you want to convey.
There are two marshall, and they are marshall and marshal. If you want some advice USE AN ONLINE DICTIONARY!!!!!!!
The correct answer is you and your family but if you want it to be completely correct you should write your family and you. If you want to talk about your family you should write my family and I.
Yes, it is correct, but rather literary, not to say old-fashioned in today's idiomatic English. In normal speech, the phrase is "You want him to be your friend" or "you want to be friends with him."
If I'm correct it means "What you want b*tch?" or something similar to that.
No, The correct form would be "I want to make him speak English". The word "to"is a preposition so therefore must take a noun as its object. The work "speak" is a verb in this sentence so therefore "to speak" would be incorrect. Get rid of the"to"before the word speak. (This is only for this sentence. There are other instances where "to speak" is correct.)
Take a tangent at the point where you want the slope. Then the slope of the graph at that point is the slope of the tangent, which is found by taking another point on the tangent and then taking the change in y between the two points and divid it by the change in x.
Proper usage of this phrase is "I can never..." If you want to use "can't" instead it would be "I can't ever..."
Yes But, it is better to say 'Can you correct my paper, please'
Yes, "un bonbon" is correct in French. It translates to "a candy" in English.
Please learn the correct English language grammar of a question if you want an answer.