i was goa
Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
As in making it grammatically correct? It is written great-grandfather.
Yep, it's correct - English is a great language, isn't it?
I am a great fan of jam, but my horror for marmalade is infinite.
The correct form is greater, the comparative form of the adjective (great, greater, greatest).
Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
If you are speaking of "Marion, you are great," yes, that is correct. In English the construction is called "direct address."
As in making it grammatically correct? It is written great-grandfather.
No. It would have to be changed to "You were treated to a great dinner."
The subject should be singular, problem, to agree with the verb has, or the verb should be have, not has, to be in agreement with the plural subject, problems.
Yep, it's correct - English is a great language, isn't it?
"he is a great chess player" is grammatically correct, but the rest could be better. No one really says footballer, a better choice would be Football player try: "he plays football and chess well." or "he's great at both football and chess."
The sentence should be corrected to "Your blue jeans are good."
If you capitalize the first letter of the sentence and place a period at the end, use an apostrophe for the contraction for 'it's', it is a correct sentence: It's going to be a great night today. Although correct as a sentence, it would make more sense if it said: It's going to be a great night tonight.
It's the Declaration of Independence. The thirteen colonies declared their independence from Great Britain.
Voyage on the Great Titanic was created in 1998.
There are a few ways you could correctly punctuate this sentence. "Wow! What a great surprise.", shouted Ernesto. "Wow, what a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto. "Wow! What a great surprise!", shouted Ernesto.