Both can be used:
She has yet to come.
She is yet to come.
The correct spelling is future (time yet to come).
It is not correct to say 'great times are now'; instead, say 'great times have come'.
"She didn't come" is the correct way of saying this. You could say "She never came" or "She didn't want to come" or "It was her fault she didn't come and nothing to do with me" or "It doesn't matter whether she came or not" After a form of 'to do' you always say the infinite vrom of the verb
Not yet but i say there will be one.
no he still did not say yet
The correct sentence would read: "You came home the latest," or "You are the last to come home."
No, because "let's" means "let us", and it does not make sense to say "let us join us." It would be correct to say, "Come on, let's join them." It would also be correct, if you are speaking to someone outside your group, to say, "Come on, join us."
If you mean grammatically, no, the proper speech would be "the lectures have not (or haven't) begun yet".
nope come out march 6th correct me if im wrong
A comma before "who" is typically used when it introduces a non-restrictive clause providing additional information about the noun. For example: "Sarah, who is my neighbor, invited me to dinner." If the clause is essential to the meaning of the sentence, then no comma is needed.
No, it is not correct. I contains a very common mistake of using "I" as an object when it is part of a compound object (of the preposition "with"). "I" is correct as a subject; "me" is correct as an object. The easiest way to determine whether to use "I" or "me" is to try the same sentence with "I" or "me" alone--leaving "my friends" out of it for this test. You would say, "Can you come with me to Central Park?" You would never say, "Can you come with I to Central Park?" This tells you that you need to use the objective form, "me": "Can you come with my friends and me to Central Park?" No it's correct
Dr Elamin didn't come is the correct way.