This will be an exciting month is correct grammar.
Yes it is. The sentence "This will be an exciting month for me" is absolutely correct (it needs a period at the end, of course). But "a correct grammar" is not-- you want to ask whether it is "grammatically correct," or to be simpler, ask whether it is "good English."
Ziplining the longest zipline in Asia is correct grammar. Asia needs to be capitalized. Some people use the term zooming, as in zooming the longest zipline in Asia. It sounds more appealing and exciting.
It would be more correct to say, 'I wish the month of November ended really fast.' November has 30 days.
"I really want this month of June will be ended immediately" is not correct. It should be "I really want this month of June to end immediately."
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
The sentence 'Im so excited for the incoming month' is not correct grammar. Im needs to be changed to I'm. We don't use incoming to refer to months. You could use upcoming, approaching, coming, or next.
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.
The correct grammar is: "Are those correct?"
"On a train" is correct grammar.
The correct grammar for this sentence is: "When did you send it?"
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
No, the correct grammar would be "I hate you the way you hate me."