Yes
Yes, the sentence "He is their most targeted receiver" is grammatically correct. It means that he is the receiver who gets the most passes thrown to him by his team.
No, "most friendly" is not grammatically correct. The correct form would be "friendliest" when comparing three or more things.
Yes, "most preferable" is grammatically correct. It is a comparative form that indicates the highest level of preference in a given context.
The green moss was most slippery when it was wet.
No, "most catchiest" would be redundant. Catchiest already makes a thing the most or best. Use most only when you are not using a word that already implies most. It was the catchiest slogan the Republicans could offer. It was the most catchy line he could think of.
"have well and" can be a grammatically correct phrase only if the word "and" is followed by another adverb, with "well and truly" probably being the most common. In fact this phrase is so common that it is best avoided as a cliche.
No, "most friendly" is not grammatically correct. The correct form would be "friendliest" when comparing three or more things.
No. It is my favorite place is the correct spelling. Most is implied in favorite.
No, it is not. It would be either most sweet, or sweetest.
correct. but one religon seems to have the most terrorists.
Yes, you can say that in correct English. One of the most cutest is grammatically correct.
Yes.
In the NBA.
It doesn't look grammatically correct, but not everything that is correct looks that way. When you break the sentence apart, there is nothing missing. It has a subject and a predicate. Although "You are the winner" may be more appealing to most people, I do not believe there is anything grammatically incorrect with your example, as ugly as it may sound. It is correct. You can be be a subject or an object pronoun. subject - You are the winner! object - The winner is you!
"have well and" can be a grammatically correct phrase only if the word "and" is followed by another adverb, with "well and truly" probably being the most common. In fact this phrase is so common that it is best avoided as a cliche.
Yes, "most preferable" is grammatically correct. It is a comparative form that indicates the highest level of preference in a given context.
Most of the time it is not because people like to be quick and insted of saying 'are' they would say 'R'.
The superlative degree of "lively" is "liveliest". This is equivalent to the alternative "most lively". Both are grammatically correct.