This week would be a blessing, is grammatically correct.
Depends on how you use it. "How much candy do you buy each week?" is correct.
Yes, the term 'here of late' is correct English grammar, as in: 'He was here of late, but he'll be in London next week.', which could equally be expressed: 'He was here [recently, lately, latterly], but he'll be in London next week.'
The correct grammar is "Gary and Louise saw a deer last week."
You should use "Russ's" in this case, as it is the correct possessive form for a singular noun ending in "s." Therefore, the correct sentence would be "Russ's laptop was stolen last week." This usage is consistent with standard English grammar conventions.
No, the sentence is not correct. The pronoun 'I' is the first person subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the first person object pronoun. The sentence should read:I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week.
The correct grammar for this sentence should be: "Do you know that these gloves have been lying on the bureau all week?" This change is needed because "lying" is the correct verb form to describe the action of the gloves being placed on the bureau.
It is proper grammar.
I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week. You can tell because if you take out Mariam does the sentence sound okay.
It means something that is a blessing but presents itself at the time as problem. Example: Jill got fired last week, but she hadn't been fired she never would have found that job close to her house that pays twice as much. Therefore getting fired was a blessing in disguise
No. It would be better to say: every week on Friday the Friday of every week the week beginning every Friday
Yes, the possessive form of the noun week is the correct form for 'the end of the week' (the week's end).
figure it out dummy