yes, although it would be clearer to say you are mature for your age, or wise for your age. As given, the sentence suggests that you are are accountable for being 15.
It is a feeling of being excited about something.The meaning of enthusiasm is excited.
The meaning of the saying 'I am so humbled' is that a person is flattered and is being made to feel modest of something. Another meaning is feeling undeserving of something.
Technically, no. In formal writing, Is this she is correct. Is this her is, however, normal and therefore correct informal spoken English.Technically: she is a subject pronoun and is notused in the object position. Her is an object pronoun and is not used in the subject positionIs this her? = correct
No, it is not ok because a baby is a person and a living thing, no matter how small. Some people do and this is not right.
A puzzla (pronounced puzzler) is, usually, a typo.The correct meaning of a puzzla is a sentence without the letter e in it (hence being "puzzla").
a good citizen is a responsible person meaning that a responsible person would pay their taxes
The state of being responsible, accountable, or answerable, as for a trust, debt, or obligation., That for which anyone is responsible or accountable; as, the resonsibilities of power., Ability to answer in payment; means of paying.
Maybe being responsible in what you are doing. being responsible. being understable. think 10 times. before you do it.
Maybe being responsible in what you are doing. being responsible. being understable. think 10 times. before you do it.
Respondant
It depends.* Being a "responsible person" is usually considered a positive trait. * On the other hand, if you are (for example) the person "responsible" for breaking the window, that's not a good thing.
Both may be correct, with different meaning. For example, in There is a stigma to being a Liberal in some notoriously "red" States, the stigma belongs to "being Liberal," while in A person may acquire a stigma for being Liberal, the stigma belongs to the person.
It is a feeling of being excited about something.The meaning of enthusiasm is excited.
The verb "have been" is the correct form for the first person, second person, a the third person singular.Examples:I have been...You have been...He (she/it) has been...We have been...They have been...The form "have being" is not a correct verb form.
The owner of the car (person(s)) who took the loan on the car are responsible
Both I and me point to the same person - with I being correct. (Note the upper-case I.)
human being???...