Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct.
'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.'
'How will you know if you passed it?'
'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
Yes, that is correct.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
The sentence "How much does it cost?" is a correct interrogative sentence (a question).However, the form "how much it costs" is also correct when used in a declarative sentence, "I don't know how much it costs." or "How much it costs is not a factor."
no it is not a correct sentence.
Subject of the sentence: Susan Verb: passed Direct Object: a note Indirect Object: you
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "I know you have it; just give it to me."
No. The correct is: Hansel doesn't know it happened.
Yes, that is correct.
It is more than thirteen years since we met so I didn't expect you to recognise me
The sentence is almost correct. It could be improved by changing 'well' to 'well', to say: "If you have my number, you know who I am well."
No, it's unintelligible.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
No, the correct grammar is "He walked past the garden." "Passed" is used as a verb to indicate movement beyond something, while "past" is used as a preposition to indicate movement alongside or beyond something.
My teacher gave me the word inlegible, which I don't know how to use in a correct sentence.
The first sentence - I want to be promoted - means that 'I' wants someone to promote him . We don't know who that someone is because this is a passive sentence and in passive sentences we don't always know who does the action. This is a correct sentence.The second sentence - I want to promote in a higher position - means that 'I' does the action of promote. But we don't know who 'I' wants to promote because there is no subject. This sentence is not correct.I want to promote her to a higher position. - In this sentence 'I' does the action of promote and the person who is promoted is 'her'. This is a correct sentence.
The proper grammatical way to let someone know that someone has died is "passed away." "I'm sorry, I had no idea that your best friend passed away earlier this month" is a sentence that uses the past tense version correctly.passed away