No, the correct form is, "You weren't interested."
The contraction wasn't is short for 'was not'. The contraction weren't is short for 'were not'.
Tony said that he and Jill aren't interested
he wasnt. his father forced him.
The English sentence "Neither Kyle not his brother are interested in bask" does indeed show the correct subject-verb agreement. For further advice on grammatical matters, try the "Grammarly" website.
the correct answer is: I am interested in working....
"How are you" is a correct sentence.
Less.
Yes, this sentence is correct.
This sentence is incorrect. Bored means not interested in something, or not finding something stimulating enough to hold your attention. The correct word is board. The family will board the plane.
This sentence is a run-on sentence and contains a comma-splicing error. A possible corrected re-write of this sentence is: You realize this expired in January '09 on Medrepscom, but you want to be sure the position has been filled? If not, you are definitely interested?
You are palpitating. This is a correct sentence.
No, the correct sentence would be "Who is the singing woman?" by adding a question mark at the end. It is asking for the identity of a woman who is singing.
That sentence is grammatically correct.