It could be in certain instances, no not a very common phrase. Let's try it in a sentence: "Food wasting is a sin".
Most people would reverse the two words and say, "Wasting food is a sin."
It is proper English to say thank you for your concern because that goes to show that you acknowledged the person you are talking to
Yeah you can say that or you can also say I can believe
Yes.
No it is "went well".
What sentences
No but Jack Morgan can.
That you need to speak proper English.
The same way you say it in English. It is a proper name.
no it is not correct to say you are not for sure instead you can say in proper English that you are not sure about something
Requests is an English word (plural of request), however we can not say if your use of the word is correct English because you have failed to say in your question how you were trying to use it.
You should say "(noun) and I" when referring to yourself and someone else as the subject of a sentence. For example, "My friend and I went to the store." Use "me and (noun)" when you are the object of the sentence, as in "He gave the book to me and my friend."
"Flatofilo" is not an English word. It might be a misspelling or a word from another language. If you can provide more context, I can try to help you identify the correct term in English.