NO IT SHOULD BE: for the use of..."
Both mean the same thing.
dont know why i made the start capitalised LOL
:) Have A Nice Day
Your Loved
No, the question is not grammatically correct. It should be "Does she have a pen?" using the correct form of the verb "have" for the subject "she."
All it needs is a question mark. Have you had lunch? That is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is grammatically correct, as long as it is punctuated as a question: "Did you fight?"
The question appears to be incorrect...Would: "That is her boyfriend." be grammatically correct? Is a correct question that can be answered in the affermative: Yes.
It is grammatically correct as a question.
No, it is not. There is not such thing as "use to". It is always "used to". (with a D). However, with that minor detail it would be. If you were to structure the sentence with the inverted order, it woul read: "That didn't used to be a school." That is a grammatically correct sentence/question.
Yes, the question "Where are you going tomorrow?" is correct grammatically.
As in someone trying to remember where they left off, "Where was I?" is correct, yes.
This is not grammatically correct. The correct form is 'you do not know', or the abbreviated 'you don't know'.
It is not, but it is widely used because it conveys the general idea of the question as well as its grammatically correct version.No you should say "Where are you" the at at the end is not needed.
The grammatically correct way would be: To whom did you sell your old car?
I don't understand the question. Perhaps you mean; "Is anyone capable of writing a coherent, intelligible and grammatically-correct question?"