"Where did the man swim from?" is colloquially common, but in formal discourse it should be changed to "From where did the man swim?"
"I went for a swim" is correct.
That is the correct spelling of "swimming."
Yes, man does have the ability to swim. It depends on the person and whether or not he has had training for the same.
Yes.
The phrase "Max insisted to go for a swim" is not correct. The proper phrasing should be "Max insisted on going for a swim." The verb "insist" is typically followed by "on" and a gerund (the -ing form of the verb).
Yes you can swim in it and they won't hurt you.
No....."Neither of the boy's in the water could swim"....
NO, Batman does not swim. Because if he was indeed a "bat" man, bats are unable to swim because of the structure of their wings.
The correct answer to complete the sentence is "wakes me up to swim." So, the full sentence would read: "My mother wakes me up to swim every morning." This indicates that your mother has a routine of encouraging or prompting you to swim each morning.
Tiger it can swim. It works, but still poor grammar. ' The tiger ; it can swim. ' is more correct. Better alternatives is: ' the tiger can swim '
The correct spelling is snorkeling (to swim using a snorkel).
Yes