No you would say "My father and mother ARE walking"
you can simply say that
your parents are walking
In informal speaking, the correct slang is "How come?"However, the correct grammar to use is simply, "Why?"Examples using slang and grammatically correct versions:Slang: How come you didn't text me about the party?Grammatically correct: Why didn't you text me about the party?Slang: How come your boyfriend lied on me like that?Grammatically correct: Why did your boyfriend lie about me?Slang: How come your mom is so strict?Grammatically correct: Why is your mom is so strict?Slang: How come I wasn't asked what I thought?Grammatically correct: Why wasn't I asked for my opinion?In speaking or writing, the use of "Why" to begin questions can become boring and unneccessary. Try to vary how you form questions. For example, in some sentences you could replace "Why..." with the phrase "What reason would..."Slang: How come our neighbor acts so mean to kids?Grammatically correct: Why does our neighbor act so mean to kids?An alternate way to write the same question: What reason would our neighbor have to treat kids so meanly?Note: When switching "how come" to "why" questions, notice how the verb changes tense and how the adverb must change as well. For example, "How come your mother yells..." would change to "Why does your mom yell...".
Welcome home dad or mom....
"My mother and I" is correct.
The compound noun is grandmother (grand+mother), a word for the mother of your father or your mother.
I think him
yes
Grammatically correct.
Is your father and mother at home is correct
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "I am the mother of two children."
Yes, you do. "Stay-at-home" is hyphenated, but "mother" does not have to be. Either version is grammatically correct.
The first is more correct grammatically, but the second works if you are using it in an informal way.
"What are your parent's names," is the correct answer.
The sentence, "John stands on the road wait for his mother," is grammatically incorrect. It should be, "John stands on the road and waits for his mother."
Yes
The correct word to use here is "is" instead of "are." Although you brought in "mother," the subject of the sentence remains to be the singular word "father." Therefore, the singular word "is" should be used as well.
"My lawyer advised me to plead not guilty." "Mary will plead with her father and hope that he gives her the money."
Mother-in-lax & Son-in-law - i think it is correct