first i think no then i think yes
He is good at math
she is good at mathematics
Reed, Luke, Reece, John, lee, Brian
I love things dealing with geometric in it.
75 km is a good enough numeric format.
When a book is good, I get lost. It was this sentence grammatical corrected.
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.
No it is not a good sentence would be Movement is what my friends and i enjoy.
No. Him and me is correct.
It's not a good sentence. You should stick to standard questions, such as "Are you sure about his address?" or "You are not sure about his address, are you?"
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence. But that does not mean that it is always a good way to begin one.
Yes, it is grammatically correct because both she and i are subject pronouns. However, it is customary to say "You and she are good friends" rather than "She and you." In general, the order is (you) (he/she/they/it) (I/we).
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
Yes, that's a perfectly good sentence.
'Do your Mom and Dad enjoy good health?' is the correct sentence.="h2headingh1"style="color:rgb(0,0,0);"name="'do_your_mom_and_dad_enjoy_good_health?'_would_be_the_correct_sentence.">
"You were looking good" is grammatically correct.
Yes, that is a grammatically correct sentence. It conveys the idea that the experience has been positive and educational.