no
minutes is plural
so is should be are
here are the minutes
No, that is not correct. The correct phrase is "Here are the minutes." "Minutes" is a plural noun, so it should be paired with "are" instead of "is."
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
No, the correct phrasing is "John and I are here." In English, the pronoun "I" should always come last in a list of individuals.
You should say "Here are the names of the providers." "Here are" is used to introduce a list or set of items, while "Here the names" is not grammatically correct in this context.
"Media is here to stay" is the correct phrasing because "media" is a collective noun referring to a singular concept, so it should be paired with a singular verb "is."
The correct grammar construction is "Did you leave your phone here?"
The more correct way to say this would be "It is humbling to be here". You can, as an alternative, say "I am humbled to be here."
Got here in 2 minutes before their cut off time is not a correct grammar.
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
Yes
Me is correct here.
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
The sentence "I got here just 2 minutes before their cut off time" is correct grammar.
No, the correct phrasing is "John and I are here." In English, the pronoun "I" should always come last in a list of individuals.
yes - 40 minutes each way
You should say "Here are the names of the providers." "Here are" is used to introduce a list or set of items, while "Here the names" is not grammatically correct in this context.
Yes. "She has no idea that you are even here." is a correctly formed, gramatically correct sentence.
Well, if you talking about inanimate object, you should say here it goes, and if about person, then here you go :)