No it isn't.
You could say: "If the whole world stands in front of me I will never stop loving you."
But that doesn't really make sense either, unless you're a world leader or some figure of authority whose position could potentially prevent you from loving someone.
Suggested alternatives:
"Even with the world at my fingertips I would never stop loving you."
"If the whole world knelt before me (and I could have anyone I wanted) I would never stop loving you."
"Even with the whole world standing before me, I will never stop loving you."
"The world is my oyster, but I still love you."
No, the sentence has some errors. The correct version would be: "Even if the whole world stood in front of me, I would never stop loving you."
The correct sentence is "He never has a job" because "has" is the correct singular verb form to match the singular subject "he." "Have" is the plural form of the verb and would not be correct in this context.
The correct punctuation for "No, I have never been to Europe" is to add a comma after "No."
The sentence is not correct grammatically. It should be either "Debbie never talks to anybody in the class" or "Debbie doesn't talk to anybody in the class."
The correct spelling in this sentence is "boss's," with only one apostrophe after the 's' to show possession.
No, the correct sentence should be "Your friends and you never study on the weekends." The verb "study" should be in the present tense to match the subject, "Your friends and you."
No - the sentence 'Had never been experience' is not a correct sentence.
No, 'Is he should never have come here' is not a correct sentence and it should be 'He should never have come here.'
The correct punctuation for "No, I have never been to Europe" is to add a comma after "No."
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when used as a possessive pronoun. Only use "its' " when it is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," and never as a possessive form.
yes
The correct spelling is never poetically.An example sentence is "he speaks in riddles, never poetically".
Jimmy bought some flowers home to his loving mother.My darling wife, I will never stop loving you.
The correct one is either: You will never go either. To use neither, there must be an alternate: You will never go and neither will I.
As the group's secretary........ is correct done is spelt with an 'e' at the end This will make the sentence correct.
No. The more natural phrasing is "It will never be like it once was."
No one never dug a hole that deep before
If I Never Stop Loving You was created on 1998-02-17.