No that isn't grammatically correct.
You should say 'Though George didn't like the school, he studied in the same school for ten years'
Tricky little question. If you mean what places in the sequence of Presidents were occupied by someone named George Bush, it is correct as it stands except that "which" should be "what" and President should be in the singular. The answer, of course, is "41 and 43." If you mean "How many Presidents were George Bush" say it that way. The answer is "Two."
Because he is awsome.
you would think but no, John Kennedy and George Kennedy are not related in any way.
Beneatha met George at the University of Nigeria, where they were both studying.
I do happen to know that he grew marijuana......not sure if that's the answer you're looking for or not. Cotton is also correct, though.
George Bush is noted for convoluted, grammatically incorrect pronouncements such as "Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?", which he asked in Florence, South Carolina, on Jan. 11, 2000.
George Ford Morris was an American painter from Missouri who lived during the late nineteenth century through much of the twentieth century. He primarily taught himself how to paint, though he did spend some time studying at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Julian Academy in Paris.
all are correct
a person that would be an example of a tyrant would be King George the 3rd
While George Inness was studying art under Regis Gignoux he become widely influenced by the Barbizon artists, they emphasized soft brushstrokes in landscape paintings.
George Washington
They are both correct, but mean different things. "George criticizes most movies" means that George criticizes a lot of movies. "George criticizes mostly movies" means that George criticizes a lot of different things, but the majority of the things he criticizes are movies.