a group of students was asked
a group of students was asked.
A group of students were
The students are collecting data... correct PS; I took the test
A group of students is called a class.
few of the students are
A lethargy of students
No. If you are talking about indirect speech then - I asked him when he was born - is correct. If you are asking about direct speech then - "When were you born?" - is correct
No. If you mean " they asked a question" then the preposition is "by", not "from."
What a Group of Students is CalledA group of students is called a class and is often referred to as (name of teacher)'s class to distinguish one class from another. However, the generalized term 'gaggle' is also applied to a group of students in the comic strip Piled Higher and Deeper by Jeorge Cham, PhD.
No; you are supposed to say: He had already asked you
Because "to correct" is only the base form of the verb when it is listed in translation dictionaries. to read, to listen, etc. When you actually say or write it, you would say "I read," "I listen," "I correct." You only add the to if you are saying you "want to" do something, like "I want to correct my students," or "I want to drive the car." If you are actually doing it, then you drop the to. Saying why to correct students is asking why and addressing that question toward students that are correct or who have been correct in the past. Saying why correct students could be a third person reference instead of a 2nd person address like in the first case.
No, ask is in the incorrect tense. The correct tense is asked. I ask. He asked. Ted asked.
The correct form is the students' books.