If you'll complete your engineering course, let the "bad essay writer" aside, and go ahead. It is not mandatory to be a good writer in order to become an engineer.
However, you need to master your native language.
Yes it was very badly bombed because of engineering
The laws allowed the Indians to be treated badly.
You don't have to be creative writer, but you will be required to communicate in a concise and accurate manner. You need to be able to organize your thoughts in an effective way and write sentences that are coherent, clear and to the point. It is a real advantage to your career if you are a good writer. Even if people can eventually figure out what you are trying to say, if your writing skills are obviously lacking, it reflects badly on you and your ideas will not carry as much weight as they might.
because they was in all whites restaurant and blacks weren't allowed
Physics and engineering in college are almost all math, so you should have no problem there. You may be bad at programming a computer, but perhaps you are not so bad at being a user. For example in electronic or mechanical engineering you will use very sophisticated CAD and math software, but as a user; not really programming as a software engineer does. But I would say not to give up yet on programming. Everyone goes through what I call the "sweaty armpits" stage of programming, but after that most people (especially people who like math) really take to programming.
Yes if they have the right papers. Or if they are badly injured.
The ride was shut after an engineer was injured. The ride was started before he could remove his hand from underneath the track. His hand was badly damaged.
more badly, most badly
worse, worst
yes badly is an adverb because badly describes how we perform.
They ate to many Hot Dogs and threw up coogies who ever wrote this is mad dumb and they need life badly
A "poorly written letter" is one that is not to the point, badly spelled and badly laid out - making it difficult to read and understand what the writer is saying. "moronic" is a little more pejorative - a moron is a person born with limited mental capacity. Thus the addition of this term to the comment is a personal jibe at the abilities of the author of the letter.