Using the correct capitalization and a more appropriate relative pronoun will make it a correct sentence:
'She called me while I was there'
It should be: "I was sleeping when you called me."
Yes, that is a correct sentence.
No, the correct sentence should be "Had you taken the test before?"
Yes, the sentence is correct.
A sentence must contain a subject and a verb to be considered grammatically correct. If a group of words lacks this structure, it is not a complete sentence. It may be a sentence fragment, a phrase, or a list.
It is called an appositive phrase when a phrase separated by commas provides extra information about a noun. This can help provide clarification or additional details about the noun in the sentence.
"How are you" is a correct sentence.
The waiter is now called a server if you are politically correct.
the sentence is correct. what are you asking?
Yes, this sentence is correct.
Yes. Strictly speaking For example at the beginning of a sentence is what is called an "absolute," grammatically unconnected to the rest of the sentence.
You are palpitating. This is a correct sentence.
no it is not a correct sentence.
Yes, that is a correct sentence.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
If you are speaking of "Marion, you are great," yes, that is correct. In English the construction is called "direct address."