No, family is a singular noun that refers to a group.
My family is feeling fine.
My parents are feeling fine.
Another example is army.
Our army is massive.
It looks fine, but does not amount to much on its own! Here is a grammatically correct sentence including the words "will not be subject to": Late work will lose marks, but work handed in on time will not be subject to any penalty.
I would say " I look forward to meeting you." instead of just " Look forward to meeting you." But as far as I am concerned it is just fine and I can be a grammar snob!
That is the correct spelling of the noun "clan" (a family or social group).
"Tomorrow's weather is meant to be fine" is a correct way to use it.
That is the correct spelling of "finest" (best, or most fine).
Is this a complete imperative (ordering) sentence? If so, "protect yourself and your family members" is correct. If it is only a predicate (someone else is doing the protecting) then it's fine, but not complete.
No. Leave out "closer to" and it's fine.
In running text or prose, you should write "one-to-one." For a headline or in a bullet list, "1-to-1" is fine.
Feeling Fine was created on 2010-09-27.
Feeling Strangely Fine was created on -19-08-04.
It looks fine, but does not amount to much on its own! Here is a grammatically correct sentence including the words "will not be subject to": Late work will lose marks, but work handed in on time will not be subject to any penalty.
I would say " I look forward to meeting you." instead of just " Look forward to meeting you." But as far as I am concerned it is just fine and I can be a grammar snob!
fine tenko weather fine daijobu feeling fine bakkin traffic fine
Since you put this question in Grammar Spelling and Punctuation, what is your question? The sentence is spelled correctly and punctuated correctly, and the grammar is fine.
miercoles noche is spanish for wednesday night me siento bien is im feeling fine
Cybill - 1995 Fine Is Not a Feeling 4-16 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:Atp
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