The correct way to say that would be something like "the people were taken to the camp."
The correct form of this sencence would be, "There are encouraging words from your classmates."
"Did not take" is correct.
The singular possessive form of echo is echo's.example: The echo's sound took us by surprise.
No a correct sentence would be "My dad took a picture of you and him."
The noun ox is the singular form; the plural form is oxen.
The correct form of this sencence would be, "There are encouraging words from your classmates."
The correct word form is: four and eleven hundredths.
The correct word form is two and thirty-six hundredths.
The correct word form is two hundred fourteen thousandths.
That is the correct spelling of "dictation" (putting spoken words into written form).
"Did not take" is correct.
The correct form is "a woman" because the word "woman" begins with a consonant sound. The article "an" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound.
The singular possessive form of echo is echo's.example: The echo's sound took us by surprise.
Either form of the prepositional phrase is correct, depending on the sentence; for example:The book is in your desk. I took the book from your desk and put it in the bottom drawer.
The first is almost correct. It should be, "Some athletes have taken drug tests to prove they are not on steroids." That is, "have taken" is the correct form, but it should also be "drug tests" rather than "drugs tests". "Have taken" is the correct form because "have" is the plural form, and "athletes" is plural. The singular form is "has taken", so it would be correct to say "One athlete has taken drug tests to prove he is not on steroids." Always use the past participle "taken" and not the simple past tense "took" in forms that use a form of the auxiliary verb "have": have taken, had taken, has taken, would have taken, and so on.
No a correct sentence would be "My dad took a picture of you and him."
The incorrect plural noun form is 'wolfs'. The correct plural form for wolf is wolves.