In American English, this is correct grammar. There is only one couple, therefore "has" is correct. However, UK English looks at any singular subject that represents multiple persons as plural, so they would say "have six children." Similarly, in the UK, they might say "Led Zeppelin haven't toured in quite some time," while we in the US would say "Is Led Zeppelin ever going to go on tour again?"
By or at a certain age are both correct, with slightly different meanings. We say by age six when we are thinking of a succession of years; but we say at ten years of age when considering that one time.
8-6 are 13, since it is plural. The correct way to say it however would be 8-6 equals 13 but it actually equals 14.
No. As well as the expert answer above, you could say If all goes well, I am home before six o'clock.
The correct spelling is "six hundred and twenty-four".
Seventy-six is the correct way to spell it.
3 out of 7
"Three and six hundredths" is the correct form. In technical contexts it is often said "three point oh six", which is considered correct in those contexts.
By or at a certain age are both correct, with slightly different meanings. We say by age six when we are thinking of a succession of years; but we say at ten years of age when considering that one time.
The correct way to say/write 2.600 is "two and six hundred thousandths."
8-6 are 13, since it is plural. The correct way to say it however would be 8-6 equals 13 but it actually equals 14.
Arty Chokes Six For A Dollar At Safeway
Yes, Sigmund Freud had six children with his wife Martha Bernays.
Thirty-one million, five hundred fifty-seven thousand, six hundred.
"Six times nine is fifty-six" is grammatically correct. By the way, six times nine is actually fifty-four (54), not fifty-six (56).
1 in 64
That is the correct spelling of six (6).
She had four children in the first six years of her marriage. She had four children in the first six years of her marriage. She had four children in the first six years of her marriage.