That sentence is grammatically correct only if you are talking about a single item called "The Best Pictures." Otherwise, the correct form is "The best pictures will find their places in the museum."
The sentence is grammatically correct.
The best place to find historically correct Vikings pictures, would be at the Smithsonian Museum. The Smithsonian is located in Washington DC. So if you are wanting the most accurate pictures that is the place that I would suggest for someone.
Yes, the sentence "you saw your uncle and aunt come out" is grammatically correct. It describes the action of seeing both your uncle and aunt exiting from a place.
No, the sentence is incomplete. It needs additional information to be grammatically correct, such as what happened during lunchtime or where it took place. For example, "Today during lunchtime, I met a friend at a café."
You need to specify which place you are referring to if you want to make it possible to answer your question. Please, also note that a sentence requires a verb so that a) it is complete grammatically; b) the action which is involved is spelled out.
Grammatically correct but idiomatically awkward and unclear. Do you mean something like Having a place to call home can mean different things to different people? Or is it really, as stated, that a place called home can have purposes of its own?
You would capitalize the first letter of the sentence to make it grammatically correct: "We had fun at Prairie Trail Park."
No. It is my favorite place is the correct spelling. Most is implied in favorite.
No, the word 'Alice' is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a person.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in sentence. Example:Alice came to visit and shebrought the baby with her. (the pronouns 'she' and 'her' take the place of the noun 'Alice' in the second half of the sentence)
museum museum
The Harley Davidson Museum is one of the out-of-place museums in the world.
The Titanic Museum is a place where they show things they found on the titanic.