Yes. For example, All he needed was love from Tracy and you.
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
no is Tracy and you If it from first person point of view it would be Tracy n i or me and tray
The correct way form of this is "To love is to endure"
No, not even close. What exactly are you trying to ask?
no, I should be Holly and I
The sentence Let this promise remind you of his unfailing love is grammatically correct.
Yes, but it is very informal - that is not suitable for writing.
No. You'd need to add either a comma or an S to make it grammatically correct.Amy, love Roger.andAmy loves Roger.are both grammatically correct, though the first one seems a bit rude.
"Not like that" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context.
Yes! That is grammatically correct!
Yes, 'for free', is grammatically correct.
This is not grammatically correct. The correct form is 'you do not know', or the abbreviated 'you don't know'.