He had the answer on the tip of his tongue, is the correct way. He was just about to say it. You use your tongue to speak, so it was on the tip of his tongue.
The first sentence is correct.
Yes, "All the tins fell down." is a correct sentence if you remember to capitalize the first letter of the sentence.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
both are correct but first one is a question and second is a sentence
"I" is the first person pronoun.
That sentence is not correct. The correct usage of grammer in the sentence is: The first ones in line for concert tickets were Jose and he.
"Who sells it?" is correct (always capitalize the first letter of a sentence).
first we will see the answer then we are write correct answer
human breathing is some time fast from first nostril and second nostril from slow. There after some time changing, slow breathing from first nostril and fast breathing from second nostril.
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
The first sentence is correct.
No. It is not a sentence.
The sculpture was free-form. This is a correct sentence if you capitalize first letter.
"It is dark in the night." is a correct sentence if you remember to capitalize the first letter of the sentence and put a period at the end.
The grammar is correct but there should be no capitals in the middle of the sentence. Only the first letter of a sentence or proper nouns and the pronoun 'I' are capitalized. There are no proper nouns in the sentence: "I water the plant." is correct.
No, I think the correct way is- Is this the first time you've seen it?
The first thing you do before correcting a sentence would be read it. Then you would need to correct what needs to be.