Yes.
Dogs are better then human? what ia the correct sentence
I do not think that the sentence is grammatically correct. The sentence seems ambiguous to me. Is the statement suggesting that "she has good command" of a group of people or animals? Or, is the statement suppose to imply that "she has command" of the English language?
You can do anything you want. As long as the puntcuation is correct. That's pretty much the only rule with the English language.
a kernel sentence is the simplest sentence in English language
Endless, you could, technically, continue writing a sentence until the day you die and it still be correct if you used proper punctuation,
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
She took studied orthography to better understand the English language.
No, the correct form is "Is she correct?" The subject (she) comes before the verb (is) in English sentence structure.
You need to learn the rules of English grammar to be able to correct sentences.
There is an incorrect idiom in the sentence. Idioms are the common, generally very arbitrary ways that we speak our language. For example, in this sentence you have command of a language not in a language. The sentence should read: She has good command of English.
Wonderful is the correct spelling.
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.