It is almost correct: it simply needs an article before the word phone, to make the sentence "Yours is the briefcase with the phone ringing inside." This sentence could be the answer to the question, "Which briefcase is mine?"
"The briefcase with the phone ringing inside is yours" is a more common construction, however.
No, the correct grammar would be: "Yours is the briefcase with the phone ringing inside."
No, the correct grammar should be: "I am pleased to catch a glimpse of your beautiful face."
No, the grammar in that sentence is not correct. It should be: "Once we get inside, David said, 'You can take your boots off.'"
OnBoth are correct, according to context. When "dish" means the vessel holding the food, we use on if it is a flat dish, or in if it is a deep dish. When "dish" means the food itself, as in "Apple crumble is my favorite dish," we use in.
The part of the bell that makes the sound is called the clapper. This is the hanging piece inside the bell that strikes its sides to create the ringing sound.
Yes, "I am in your home" is grammatically correct. It is a simple sentence stating that the speaker is currently inside the home of the person they are talking to.
Yes, and if anyone argues you're ending a sentence with a preposition, they're wrong. In this case, 'inside' functions as an adverb answering the question "where is the phone ringing?" The possessive pronoun 'yours' is correctly taking the place of the noun briefcase as the subject of the sentence. The object of the linking verb 'is' is the complete noun clause 'the briefcase with the phone ringing inside'.
No, the correct grammar should be: "I am pleased to catch a glimpse of your beautiful face."
No, the grammar in that sentence is not correct. It should be: "Once we get inside, David said, 'You can take your boots off.'"
OnBoth are correct, according to context. When "dish" means the vessel holding the food, we use on if it is a flat dish, or in if it is a deep dish. When "dish" means the food itself, as in "Apple crumble is my favorite dish," we use in.
Whomever is correct. Would you say "You talk to she..." or "You talk to her". "Whoever" matches the subject of a sentence. Whomever matches the predicate (ending) of a sentence. Read it with the changes that were made. Which sounds better. - The answer above is above is not right. The question is a thorny one, because while "whomever" is correct as the object of the preposition "to," it CANNOT be be the subject of the finite verb "was." If we did not have the -ever part, we would say "Talk to him or her who is inside," with the object and subject pronouns properly sorted out. Since "whomever was inside " is utterly barbarous ( we don't say "him was inside" for example) I would say "Talk to whomever you like," but "Talk to whoever was inside."
Yes, the padding inside will keep your laptop and other equipment safe.
You might have to put a Vacuum in the milk carton.Although it more like taking air out of the milk carton rather than putting something into it. Please tell me I'm correct.
It depends on the size of the briefcase and the packets of money you have. According to an elegant test done by the creators of the site: http://www.cockeyed.com/inside/million/million.html A stack of $100 bills would be 40 inches tall. These bills will not quite fit into a standard briefcase. In the test, a standard briefcase held about $780,000.00 A "Captain's Case" used by pilots and lawyers holds just over $1 million. This is a "double-wide" briefcase, but a briefcase nonetheless. The 5" Halliburton Stainless Steel briefcase has the look of an executive briefcase and holds $1 million in $100 bills almost exactly. The bills, in $100 bills, weighs about 20 pounds. The hundred dollar bill is the largest generally available to the public, so you have to consider this as the "gold standard" for the answer to the question. If the money is in smaller bills, you need more bills to make $1 million, and more space to hold them all. No briefcase tested held $2 million in hundreds, so it's safe to say that in order to fit into any briefcase generally available, you million needs to be made up of mostly $100 bills.
Either could be correct, depending on context. "The thief has been located in the library." (The thief is inside the walls of the library.) "The thief has been located at the library." (The thief could be anywhere on the library grounds.)
Making some sound (ringing a bell, dropping an object, etc.) inside a vacuum.
Both are correct, in is just an abbreviation for inside, so the sentences are the same.
You do not need any briefcase to get in the military base . To get in the military base, you need to complete the COP LAND mission of VERCETTI ESTATE . Then a dress of a cop will be unlocked . You can find it inside the police station near Ocean View . Wear that Dress and go to the military base.