smiling to you
No, standing on bus stop is not correct. Standing at the bus stop is correct.
Stop it! You shouted. "Stop it," you shouted. Stop it. You shouted.
If it's used as a question, yes. If not, then it is a correct phrase but not a complete sentence.
No, it should be ever-smiling person.
close your mouth
Both sentences are grammatically correct. The first sentence, "The medicine helped stop the vomiting," uses the base form of the verb "stop." The second sentence, "The medicine helped to stop the vomiting," includes the infinitive form of the verb "to stop." Both convey the same meaning and are interchangeable.
No because that is two sentences and they should be separated by a full stop or at least a semicolon: The answers are short; they are correct.
When the killing stops...orWhen the killings stop...
when he cant stop smiling and lookin at you
Yes, the sentence "Could you please stop mocking me?" is grammatically correct. It is a polite way to request someone to cease making fun of or imitating you.
John was smiling all day after answering the hardest math problem of the day.
The word sought is likely smiling (showing a smile) or smelling (having or detecting an odor).