I like the kind of person you are.
Each one of you has this kind of power.
Only if punctuated: Thanks, God. If not directly addressing the Almighty, Thank God is the correct form.
"Go!" is the shortest complete sentence, since an imperative (an order, such as "Go!" ) can stand alone in English without a subject. In this kind of sentence, the pronoun "you" is the implied subject.
No. We say "kind of knowledge." In English we need the partitive genitive to follow "kind."
This is not a complete sentence. But if it is just a phrase taken from a sentence or a complimentary closing in a letter, there is nothing wrong with it grammatically. Stylistically, it sounds like it was written by someone from India, which is fine if you are Indian or writing to someone in India. Contemporary American prose tends to be much simpler.
What kind of person is correct.
Each one of you has this kind of power.
That depends on when you use "I am." It's kind of correct to use "I am" as the only words in a sentence if someone asks if you are doing something. It's also grammatically correct to say "I am" after the relative prounoun what. For example, both "You are turning into what I am," and "I am what I am," are grammatically correct.
"The dog has its own collar" is grammatically correct. Many people mistakenly use "it's" in this kind of sentence, but that is the contraction for "it is," not the possessive form of "it."
The sentence: "He concurs this book is good." is not grammatically correct. Alternatives include "He concurs; this book is good." or "He concurs that this book is good." A sentence cannot have two verb-subject pairs without some kind of conjunction.
Only if punctuated: Thanks, God. If not directly addressing the Almighty, Thank God is the correct form.
"Go!" is the shortest complete sentence, since an imperative (an order, such as "Go!" ) can stand alone in English without a subject. In this kind of sentence, the pronoun "you" is the implied subject.
No. We say "kind of knowledge." In English we need the partitive genitive to follow "kind."
it would be kind if you could leave a positive feedback Or, It would be kind of you to leave positive feedback. Perhaps better: I would be grateful if you leave your honest feedback.
It depends on context and which kind of like is meant. Both of the following are correct:"Mary likes me" and "Why would she care for a man like me?"
The phrase "do good to everyone" is grammatically correct, but it may be more commonly expressed as "be kind to everyone" or "treat everyone well."
No. "One of the most unique pressing surfaces..." is a correct noun phrase, a group of words (without a verb) based on a noun. The noun in the phrase is 'surfaces'.A noun phrase functions as a noun as the subject of a sentence or a clause and as the object of a verb or a preposition.However the phrase "most unique" is grammatically and symantically incorrect. The word "unique" means "one of a kind." It is impossible for something that is unique (one of a kind) to be more one of a kind, or more unique, than something else. Consequently it is impossible for anything to be "the most unique."An equivalent but grammatically correct phrase might be "one of the most distinctive pressing surfaces..."