No. While "everywhere" is a relative adverb here, replacing the more formal "in every place that", the sentence is not correct due to the lack of punctuation. It would be better written as You can search everywhere I live; you can trace everywhere I am.Even better would be to separate it as two sentences.
The sentence "Dr. John Trace has an office in Hawaii" is singular because it refers to one specific person (Dr. John Trace) and his office in Hawaii.
This sentence appears to have a grammatical error. It seems like you are trying to say "She is the birthday of March." However, the correct way to say this in Spanish would be "Ella cumple años en marzo," which means "Her birthday is in March."
She was proud to trace her lineage back to the Mayflower settlers.
traced
Here's a sentence: The dread in Cory's voice was evident when his teacher announced that he was to attend summer school.Here's another sentence: It was evident to all of the kingdom's residents that their queen was desparate for more soldiers when she placed a twelve year old girl among the top ranks of the army.Synonyms: obvious, apparentAntonyms: hidden, concealedSorry if I wasn't helpful.
The two sentences are grammatically correct.
just search for images on yahoo, then search trace Cyrus
Answers provided to questions have vanished without a trace.
Example sentence - The detective would trace the steps of the criminal activity to help solve the case.
You could probably find trace amounts everywhere.
heavy metals are natural elements and are found in trace amounts everywhere and in everything. the problem is when they accumulate to more then trace amounts.
Please trace this set of blueprints for me.
Pretty much everywhere... But not so much on is legs.
The FBI can trace a phone call to a location within 10 meters.
Yes, but it is a trace gas making up only 0.039% of the atmosphere.
you re trace your steps and go everywhere you went before you lost it.
Memory trace