Yes. Originally, the grammatical rule was to never end a sentence with a preposition. However, this has become obsolete in modern English usage.
Another example, " Go on ! " meaning continue with your ......
Yes. There is no rule against ending an English sentence with a preposition. That is a genteel error foisted on schoolchildren by educationists. It is Latin sentences that may not end with a preposition. Jamming English grammar into a Latin straitjacket is something no idiomatic speaker of English will put up with.
Yes, it is correct to say that you do sports. I do sports. You do sports. He does sports. She does sports. Fido does sports. We do sports. All of you do sports. They do sports.
No
If you are talking about the ill, Enfermo in the correct word to use.
Yes.
Yes.
No "girls sports" is correct.
Lack of Oxygen. Contemporaroly we can say, they become ill.
That is the correct spelling of "ileum" (the absorptive lower section of the small intestine).
it depends on what sport but some sports say four bagger
It would be play, as the sentence would read for example, 'Do you play different sports?','Pintsinker has played many different sports in his lifetime', or even 'Pintsinker is hopeless at playing different sports'.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "turn onto a road". It would be more common to use the name of a specific road or to say "the road" rather than "a road".Examples:To get there, you go about one mile, and then you turn onto the road just past the railroad tracks.You go straight for 1.5 miles and then you turn onto Raleigh Road.
I was ill = chaliti (חליתי)