that is not the wright question i ask
No.To show possession we usually use apostrophe s ('s). So your sentence should be written like this: They had a fight over Holly's toy.
No "The fan is overhead" is correct.
Their house is over there; they're not there.
no it is not correct
No, it is not. Who is walking over the stump? There is no noun to accompany the verb. A correct sentence would be: I walk over the stump.
Yes. Example sentence: The president presided over the meeting.
The corrected sentence is "Whose dog are they over there?" In this correction, "who's" is changed to "whose" to indicate possession, "them" is replaced with "they" to provide the correct subject form, and "their" is replaced with "there" to indicate location.
She really likes "that" house over there.
The siblings had a squabble over who got to use the computer first.
By the time the fight was over, the boxer had blood flowing from every orifice of his broken body.
Quarrel means fight, as in you shouldn't quarrel over the small things in life
Emotionally, I felt sad and mad but was relieved that it was over.