No it is incorrect. "Fun" is a noun and "so" is an adverb. Adverbs modify adverbs and adjectives, they do not modify nouns. The speaker must say something like "...it was so muchfun."
Ruins is plural so the grammatically correct form is The Ruins of Windsor are
Yes, you can say that in correct English. One of the most cutest is grammatically correct.
No. 'Many' is plural so it is followed by the plural form of the verb. Think of it as 'they': 'Many say that the story of David and Goliath is true'. 'They say that the story ....'
'So fun' would be correct in most instances. For example, 'It was so fun'.
Yes."you are with us people"AND"we are people"so..."we people"NOT"us people"
No it is incorrect. "Fun" is a noun and "so" is an adverb. Adverbs modify adverbs and adjectives, they do not modify nouns. The speaker must say something like "...it was so muchfun."
Yes. Fun is a noun. well,having word is used in four different situations. a. having food b. having sex c. pragnant women can say i am having a baby. d. having fun has newly introduced. so that is grammatically correct. regards Emma watson
Ruins is plural so the grammatically correct form is The Ruins of Windsor are
"And so are you" is grammatically correct used in an otherwise correctly structured sentence.
So you can learn that it is grammatically correct to say exams, not, as you put it, exam
yeah I THINK so
Yes. "She and I" can be the subject of a sentence.It is correct and formal, whereas "me and her" is informal, not quite so correct, but frequently used.
"Media is here to stay" is the correct phrasing because "media" is a collective noun referring to a singular concept, so it should be paired with a singular verb "is."
No, it is not grammatically correct to say, 'revert back to'. You would simply say 'revert', as in 'Can we revert to the previous subject?' Revert means to go back (to something), so saying 'revert back to' is saying the same thing twice, which is called tautology.
Sarah and I Sarah and I is incorrect. You would not say "Meet with I" so you would not say "Meet with Sarah and I." It is grammatically correct to say "Meet with me." ... Soooo the correct answer is "Meet with Sarah and me." Hint: to figure out when to use I/me take away the other personor pronoun (like we did above) and see if the sentence is still grammatically correct, if so, that is the one you use!
The grammatically correct statement is "She does not have her book." In English, the verb "have" is used as an auxiliary verb in negative sentences, so the correct form is "have" instead of "has."
In a line of dialogue in a story. Or if you are quoting a person. So if you were to say and 7 times consecutively, and i quoted you on paper, it would be grammatically correct.