yes and no. yes- it's correct. no- i dont ;P
You will know that once the homework is checked by your teacher. If you want to know if it is correct sooner, you can look up the answers in your textbook.
No, the sentence should be: "She does not always complete her homework."
No, The correct grammar for this sentence would be, "He finished doing his homework."
No. You should say: "You were starting to do your homework when he came in."You rarely have two conjugated verbs in a sentence unless it is compound or there is a dependent clause in the sentence.
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The sentence as it is written is not correct. It needs a verb, but 'doing' is an infinitive.A better sentence is:Ashok usually does his homework at night.
No, because it's not started off with a capital letter and there's no end punctuation. It would be a sentence if it was written like this: "She will have completed the homework by Tuesday."
The correct spelling is procrastinating.An example sentence is: He is the master of procrastinating.Another example is: Stop procrastinating and do your homework.
Our teacher gives out homework assignments as though they are a sentence.
The correct answer is, they are doing their homework now, or they will do their homework now. The word do can be used as an action verb or an auxiliary verb.
The noun in the sentence is homework, a word for a thing.
The correct place is following the word home in the sentence, as follows: After school she needs to walk home, do her homework and wash dishes.
The correct pronoun is their.The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, placed before the noun 'homework' to describe the noun as belonging to the students.