The children aren't learning, but the day of the final exam is coming!
That would be more accurate.
The correct statement is: "Are your children coming home?"
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
The sentence "when you r coming" is not correct grammatically. It should be "When you are coming."
Yes, it is a complete, correct sentence.
It depends on the sentence: You will be coming to the lab in the afternoon! Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon? This afternoon, you will be coming the the lab, won't you?
No, the correct phrase is "he knew winter was coming." The word "had" is unnecessary in this sentence.
No, I prefer: "I am coming to the laboratory this afternoon."
That is a correct sentence.
They rushed excitedly like children coming out of school.
He caught a cold from the draft coming in the window. This sentence uses the correct homophone.
No, the correct grammar would be "She's coming with us." This sentence is a contraction of "She is coming with us."
The correct spelling for the word "coming" is C-O-M-I-N-G.