Yes, grammatically correct but unclear in meaning; for example:
There is insufficient information in your question to know its meaning.
Yes, saying "a very good work" is grammatically correct. It follows the pattern of using an article ("a") before a noun ("work") to indicate singularity and general reference. The adjective "very good" describes the quality of the work.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be written as "Here is my work schedule for this week."
All three sentences are grammatically correct. Each one follows the standard subject-verb-object structure and uses appropriate punctuation.
Yes, "By whom was this written?" is a correct question. It is the formal and grammatically accurate way to ask about the authorship of a written work.
The correct sentence is "Us students have a lot of work to do. Please return the book to us when you can."
Pronouns are words that replace nouns in a sentence.A pronoun can also replace pronouns.Example: You and I can do it if we work together.
It's grammatically correct but slightly peculiar. It would be more normal to say something like "I am completing the work now" or "I will complete the work now" rather than "I complete the work now".
none of them work is the gramatically proper phrase
Your question wasn't even grammatically correct enough for me to understand what you were asking.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "Write this in your copy." You may be trying to say "Write this on your copy," but both work.
No, you can say 1.Working as a teacher 2.As I work as a teacher
Yes. However hard you work, I am still not paying you more.
No. "Quicklier" is not a word. The correct form is "more quickly". Sample sentence: "We have to work more quickly to finish in an hour."
All three sentences are grammatically correct. Each one follows the standard subject-verb-object structure and uses appropriate punctuation.
Take care of, or work on, would be better put.
It looks fine, but does not amount to much on its own! Here is a grammatically correct sentence including the words "will not be subject to": Late work will lose marks, but work handed in on time will not be subject to any penalty.
I might be perfectly fine given the context. If you are writing an academic paper on the panther population then this construction will probably not work.
The correct sentence is "Us students have a lot of work to do. Please return the book to us when you can."