No, it should be "She sings badly."
No. The sentence should read "She sings badly."
No, the verb is not correct. The sentence should read:I sing in tongues.Examples:I sing...You sing...He, she, it sings... (third person, singular, present)We sing...You sing...They sing...
Incorrect: She sings bad. Correct: She sings badly. (badly is an adverb that modifies the verb sings) Incorrect: He runs a well race. Correct: He runs a race well. (well used as an adverb follows the object of the verb) Correct: He runs a good race. (good is an adjective describing the noun race) Correct: They won with a lucky shot. (lucky is an adjective describing the noun shot)
It is grammatically correct, but the word order is unusual, suggesting a Yiddish influence.
no it is not a correct sentence.
No. The sentence should read "She sings badly."
Yes, the sentence is correct. It compares the singing abilities of two individuals, indicating that he sings more beautifully than she does.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
No, the verb is not correct. The sentence should read:I sing in tongues.Examples:I sing...You sing...He, she, it sings... (third person, singular, present)We sing...You sing...They sing...
Incorrect: She sings bad. Correct: She sings badly. (badly is an adverb that modifies the verb sings) Incorrect: He runs a well race. Correct: He runs a race well. (well used as an adverb follows the object of the verb) Correct: He runs a good race. (good is an adjective describing the noun race) Correct: They won with a lucky shot. (lucky is an adjective describing the noun shot)
F*ck Ur Daughter sings bad chick
Badly.
I'm quite sure that both of the forms are correct theres no quite sure about it yes they are both correct
"How are you" is a correct sentence.
No, it is not grammatically correct because it has a redundancy of words. The correct phrase is, " . . . where are you?" (This one is nearly as bad as " end result", or "fall down", or "rise up".)
Strong Bad Sings was created on 2003-11-17.
Yes, this sentence is correct.