I believe it's ON Long Island, as in, "When you live on a small island, everybody knows everybody." If you were talking about a town, you'd say, "When you live in a small town, everybody knows everybody."
You live ON an island, while you live IN a town.
It could depend on what it is you are trying to say, but as it is it is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is correct to say that you live in the forest if your home is located within the boundaries of a forested area.
The two sentences are grammatically correct.
We say "I live on an island" because the preposition "on" is used to denote location on a surface, such as an island.
Live on Long Island was created in 1980.
Yes, both "two homes" and "two houses" are grammatically correct. "Two homes" refers to two places where people live or reside, while "two houses" specifically refers to two dwellings that are separate structures. The choice between the two terms depends on the context and the intended meaning.
No. "Adventurous" is an adjective and adjectives apply to nouns. "Sheila (noun) is quite adventurous (adjective)". Live, in this context, is a verb, and a verb requires an adverb: "Live (verb) adventurously (adverb). This is the correct form.
no dinosaurs did not live on long island sound
The duration of Long Live the Island Frogs is 1.63 hours.
Long Live the Island Frogs was created on 1972-04-18.
because it's an island
The Iroquois tribes did not live on Long Island; the tribes were all from the Algonquian language group.