If asking a question, "Are jeans and a top your favorite outfit?
(or possibly 'dress' for 'outfit,' in the king's English)
If making a statement, "Jeans and a top is your favorite outfit." With the same caveat.
Ellie wore her sister's dress.
Has would be the correct verb to use.
The difference is in register. "The children went upstairs to dress." "The children went upstairs to get dressed." The first sentence is very formal, vaguely archaic, and a bit elevated. The second sentence is more general and everyday in sound. Both are perfectly correct grammatically, but they are different in register.
The correct sentence is, "Jenny likes her black dress." *The common noun is: dress (a general word for a type of garment)The proper noun is: Jenny (the name of a specific person)The term 'black dress' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The complete noun phrase is 'her black dress'. In the example sentence, the noun phrase 'her black dress' is the direct object of the verb 'likes'.*Note: The word 'black' is an adjective. An adjective is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.
changing the color of a character's dress
The sentence 'Got this free watch from their promo of the dress i buy earlier 'is not correct grammar. The verb tenses don't agree, and "I" is always capitalized and should be included at the beginning of the sentence."I got this free watch from their promo of the dress I bought earlier."
No, "is go with" is not correct grammar. The correct structure would be "go with" without the word "is." For example: "The red shoes go with the blue dress."
The sentence 'I buy a dress earlier and got this free watch from Get Loud promo' is not correct grammar because of mixed tenses in the compound predicate. Buy is present tense, but got is past tense. It should be bought and got.
If the respective man is sitting, standing or lying ON a blue dress then, yes, it is a correct sentence. If you use IN instead of ON, then he is wearing a dress.
Ellie wore her sister's dress.
Has would be the correct verb to use.
The difference is in register. "The children went upstairs to dress." "The children went upstairs to get dressed." The first sentence is very formal, vaguely archaic, and a bit elevated. The second sentence is more general and everyday in sound. Both are perfectly correct grammatically, but they are different in register.
Her favourite dress is the really pretty dress for love story
Happy is the correct spelling.An example sentence is "Wendy was very happy with her new dress".
It would be: "Does the way a woman dresses contribute to violence?"
5
mini dresses