Yes, that is correct.
It would be more accurate to say "Can you proceed with these?" or "Can you proceed with these ones?" for better clarity.
It depends upon what you are trying to say. I am ready for breakfast. I am ready to eat. Both of those are correct. In general you can be ready for (noun) and ready to (verb).
Yes that is correct.
yes
"Si tú realmente listos" is not a grammatically correct phrase in Spanish. It seems that you are trying to say "If you are really ready." The correct phrase would be "Si estás realmente listo."
"Tu listo" is not a correct phrase in Spanish. "Tu" means "your" and "listo" means "smart" or "ready," so the correct way to say "you're smart" would be "tú eres listo" or "tú eres inteligente."
eat at your own risk
Yes, the sentence is correct. It effectively conveys that the agenda for the Advanced Development meeting in September is included and ready for review.
Repeat back her concerns so you could be clear as to what the issue is. Offer to get a manager to help correct the issue. Say have a nice day when they are ready to leave.
No, the correct phrasing is "Please let me know how you would like to proceed." The word "would" should not be placed before the subject "you" in this context. The sentence should follow the standard subject-verb-object order for proper English grammar.
"Is" is the form of the verb "to be" that should be used with a third-person-singular pronoun: he, she, or it. The correct form to use with the first-person-singular pronoun "I" is "am". So you would say, "He is ready" and "I am ready."It is certainly possible to use both "I" and "is" in the same sentence, as long as you are not using "is" the verb for the subject "I": "I wonder if she is going to be there" is correct.
"Готов" (pronounced as "gotov") is how you say "ready" in Russian.