No, the correct form is "You are seated here."
Not everyone here knows proper English. Others may be lazy and use chat speech. Then of course, some are just young. In addition, there is some debate as to what is proper English. Proper British English is not the same as proper American English. Other English-speaking nations have their own variations of English.
no they are not the same me and my friend katie was sat here arguing about it the whole english lesson and we found out that they are not.
Sat already is the past participle of sit.
Here is an English sentence with the word log: Annie needs to go outside and get a log for the fireplace.One English sentence with the word log is: The boys sat on a log while they fished at the river.
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Type your answer here... Teach their children to formulate a proper question in English dufuss.
English is a proper adjective.
Absolute genius, love that question
The word English is not a proper noun when it is used as a proper adjective. That is an English accent, an English type automobile, an English looking top hat.
Why she asked me, I'll never know. "Why" is not the primary question here.
What is "do writing?" This does not appear to be proper English. If the question were rephrased in proper English, I think we would know how to answer it.
Test Scores -- 25th / 75th Percentile * SAT Critical Reading: 700 / 800 * SAT Math: 700 / 790 * SAT Writing: 700 / 790 * ACT Composite: 31 / 35 * ACT English: 32 / 35 * ACT Math: 30 / 35