no it should be a comma before the and
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. It consists of two independent clauses ("Fred loves to tease Ethel" and "Lucy loves to tease Desi") joined by the coordinating conjunction "and."
The sentence "i loves you" is grammatically incorrect because the subject pronoun "I" should be followed by the verb "love" in its base form to match the first-person singular present tense. So, the correct sentence should be "I love you."
'Love treasures lost' is an incomplete thought, an incomplete sentence. You need a subject (noun or pronoun) and a clause...She loves finding treasures that werelost.
The correct phrasing would be "She and Aaron love to cook brunch for friends every Sunday." "Her" is a possessive pronoun, while "she" is the subject pronoun needed to begin a sentence.
The subject of the sentence is the proper noun 'Isabel'.
No, it should be, "He and Patty love to travel abroad every summer." You need the subjective form (he), and not the objective form (him) for the compound subject of the sentence.An easy way to test whether to use the subjective or objective form of a pronoun is to simplify the sentence so that the correct form is much clearer. Since you would say "He loves to travel abroad" and not "Him loves to travel abroad", you would follow the same pronoun pattern and use "He and Patty love to travel...".An even simpler form for the subject of that sentence is the subjective plural pronoun, "They love to travel abroad every summer."
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
This sentence is grammatically correct, but I would recast it as, "My Mom loves the song, 'Heartache Tonight,' by The Eagles."
The sentence "i loves you" is grammatically incorrect because the subject pronoun "I" should be followed by the verb "love" in its base form to match the first-person singular present tense. So, the correct sentence should be "I love you."
No. You'd need to add either a comma or an S to make it grammatically correct.Amy, love Roger.andAmy loves Roger.are both grammatically correct, though the first one seems a bit rude.
maan loves steva and steva loves maan they are boyfriend and girlfriend
'Love treasures lost' is an incomplete thought, an incomplete sentence. You need a subject (noun or pronoun) and a clause...She loves finding treasures that werelost.
Yes it's correct.
Yes. Removing Aaron from the sentence helps with choosing the correct pronoun. "She loves to cook brunch for friends every Saturday."
The correct phrasing would be "She and Aaron love to cook brunch for friends every Sunday." "Her" is a possessive pronoun, while "she" is the subject pronoun needed to begin a sentence.
Loves is the verb in that sentence.
loves
I love you