correct
No, it is not a complete sentence.
Walking the Streets of Moscow was created in 1963.
The movie Kokoda is correct and incorrect. There are a few things that seem to be incorrect. Like I don't think that a small cottage in the middle of the kokoda track would be found while walking.
The duration of Walking the Streets of Moscow is 1.3 hours.
Yes, very correct.
It is not grammatically incorrect, but since the two ideas are not joined so much as stuck to each other, it commits the style error called "run-on sentence." Add some concessive word to the "and" clause that joins it to the first one, for example: "He is stronger than you are, and so you feel safe walking with him" or "He is stronger than you, and still you feel safe walking with him."
The verb in this sentence is 'walk', but the form it takes is incorrect for this sentence. A few sentences with the correct form of 'walk' could be: The cat walks slowly. (present tense form). The cat is walking slowly. (present progressive form) The cat walked slowly. (past tense form)
No, it is not. Who is walking over the stump? There is no noun to accompany the verb. A correct sentence would be: I walk over the stump.
The cast of Walking the Streets with a Broken Heart - 2007 includes: Jean Dugan as Jean Dugan
Impossible to determine whether it is dangling without the rest of the sentence.
The correct phrase is "walking past" as it indicates movement in relation to something else.
1. There were many children walking up and down the streets. 2. Many chickens ran around the pen. 3. Will there be many kids there?