No on two accounts.
First the sentence would need a - 'The' or 'An' as the first word to make it a proper sentence.
Second the word 'incorrigible' means - Incapable of being corrected or reformed,
and this does not properly apply to a crowd.
A better sentence for 'incorrigible' would be:-
The baby sitter found her charge's behaviour to be quite incorrigible and determined never to sit for the family again.
The conquering army marched triumphantly through the defeated enemy capitol .
The sentence is almost correct. However, it should be "You sent it through DHL yesterday."
This sentence is grammatically correct but does not have much meaning.
I thumbed through the book to find the correct answer.
definition____person freed from slavery....... As Sherman marched through Georgia and South Carolina he saw thousands of freedman African Americans.
They went through the tunnel on the train. They were through with the project and went home happy.
the dinosaur marched through the fields
The mob of protesters marched through the city streets, demanding justice for the victims.
Back in the days before computers, the only way to check that a sentence was correct was to refer to a grammar textbook. Now, of course, a sentence can be run through your word processing program's grammar, or through a more thorough professional online grammar checker.
The sentence "I have gone through" is correct. This construct is used to indicate a recent or ongoing action or experience that the speaker has personally undergone. "You had gone through" would be appropriate for describing a past action or experience that someone else has undergone.
Yes.
hammurabi