It certainly can be: Well phrased ideas are appealing.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
The sentence 'A school housed in the church is doing well,' is grammatically correct.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.The pronoun 'I' is the subject of the relative clause 'who I am'.
If I understand your sentence it should read: Both he and I are well. Or: I am well and he is well, however that does not read as easily as the first example.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
No and there are spelling mistakes as well.
It is not, but it is widely used because it conveys the general idea of the question as well as its grammatically correct version.No you should say "Where are you" the at at the end is not needed.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. It conveys a positive expression of anticipation to meet a group of people in the future.
The grammatically correct response to "How are you?" is typically "I'm good, thank you," or "I'm doing well, thanks."
A quality sentence is clear, concise, and effectively conveys the intended message. It should be grammatically correct, well-structured, and free of ambiguity or unnecessary words.
This sentence is grammatically correct the way it is written. There is nothing wrong with it. Some people would probably prefer "A person needs coordination in order to dance well", but others see "in order" as unnecessary and redundant.