No. An élite is something individuals belong to. But the fault is semantic, not grammatical.
The word "to be" in a grammatical sentence usually means future.
The use of the word "to be" in a sentence is that it is used to show future expectancy.
Including is a verb or noun.
To use "grammatical" in a sentence, you could say: "She always makes sure her sentences are grammatically correct." This showcases the use of the word "grammatical" in the context of proper sentence structure.
You could use the word "completely" as a subsitute for "totally".
Amazing individuals
This is part and parcel of an overall tendency for self-perpetuating elites to dominate fields.
According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, the word grammatical refers to something that is of or relating to grammar, and something that can be considered to conform to the rules of grammar. Example: "The book had several grammatical errors."
By any grammatical way I can approach it, you can't use "chopped" as a noun. "Chop" is a verb, and "chopped" is an adjective form of it.
In some languages, yes. But not in English. All English grammatical inflections (not that there are very many of them and most of them are -s) are suffixes. Prefixes are used to change the meaning of the word not as grammatical indicators. In Swahili, on the other hand, all grammatical inflections are prefixes. Swahili does not use suffixes.
The term you can use to describe a word that has a specific meaning or function in language is "lexeme." A lexeme is the fundamental unit of meaning in a language, representing a single word or a base form of a word that can have various grammatical forms.
Use the same grammatical pattern