"Capable of"
"Capable of"
The correct phrase is "What am I capable of?" In English, "capable of" is a common construction used to indicate the ability to do something. The phrase "Of what am I capable" is grammatically correct but sounds more formal and archaic. In everyday conversation, "What am I capable of?" is preferred.
That is the correct spelling of "proficient" (capable, qualified).
The grammar appears correct even though it is heard more like, "He is capable of doing this job."
I don't understand the question. Perhaps you mean; "Is anyone capable of writing a coherent, intelligible and grammatically-correct question?"
It is a more politically correct way to say handicapped.
Programmable is the correct spelling (something that is capable of being programmed).
The correct spelling is "estimatable." It means capable of being estimated or calculated.
capabilities is correct. Usually if your computer doesn't underline the word after you've spelled it and pressed the space bar you could assume you have spelled it correctly. Unless of course you have written another word by mistake.
You mean is the word NEGOTIABLE correct? Yes, it's 100% correct. Nice work.
You spell it like this: ingenious. Hope this helps!
the ureters are capable of peristalsis like that of the gastrointestinal tract