No. It's either "We will definitely miss you" or "We definitely have missed you", depending on which tense you're using.
i missed you
it takes a girl until after a missed period and a hpt or a trip to the docter before she knows she is pregnant .. but a missed period is definetely a huge sign .
It is if you capitalize and punctuate it correctly: I missed you, too.
The verb should be past tense, missed. We missed you at the wedding.
You say 'I've missed Half my life' which is short for : "I have missed half my life'
"i missed you so much this weekend"
You say "I missed you" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Mos'aro e".
If a person missed 2 questions on a test, they would have 44/46 correct. This would mean they had approximately .9565 correct. That times 100% = 95.65%
2 of 5 = 40% wrong .3 of 5 = 60% correct (your score).Please say it was not a math test !
No, it is just a statement being made.
you had it nearly correct. the word is JUXTAPOSITION. you missed the 't'.
In Hindi you will be missed is "Tumhari yaad aayegi" or if it is to someone older and respected you say "Aap ki yaad aayegi".