No. You can say that you will look into something, or that you will get someone to look into something, but you cannot say 'get look'.
These are all correct:
'I will look into your problem with the leaking washing machine tomorrow.'
'I will get a plumber to look into your problem with the leaking washing machine tomorrow.'
'I will get your problem with the leaking washing machine looked into tomorrow.'
The phrase "you look suspect," is grammatically correct. It contains a subject of you, the verb to look, and suspect as the direct object.
It is grammatically correct to say: There is nothing wrong with this machine.It is not grammatically correct to say: Will it is be grammatically correct to say ....The correct way to write that or say that would be: Would it be grammatically correct to say....
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
Neither is grammatically correct.
No. Him and me is correct.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.
no
yes
no
It could depend on what it is you are trying to say, but as it is it is grammatically correct.
Grammatically correct, maybe, but idiomatically wrong. We normally say "buy it for me."