A mentally challenged person, a person with a degree of mental retardation, (although this is offensive and I do not advise you to use this) or SOMEONE WITH Down syndrome!
A r*tard soon calling someone special will be offensive soon calling someone down sindrom will b ofensiv renaming something doesn't fix the problem it only cause s snow flakesss
words starting with 'A' to describe a person
No, it should be ever-smiling person.
A very loving person
Yes, but not idiomatically correct; the common phrase for that is "May I help the next person?"
Yes, it is correct to say "approaching fast." This phrase is commonly used to describe something that is getting closer or nearing quickly. It can be used in various contexts, such as when referring to a person, an event, a deadline, or a vehicle approaching rapidly.
The phrase "occupational hazardous syndrome" or "occupational hazard syndrome" has no meaning.
The phrase "c'est Grace" is grammatically correct if Grace is a person. If 'grace (Ã ) ' is used int the sense of thanks (to), then it lacks a complement.
A couch potato.
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
Yes, that phrase is grammatically correct. It implies that the action or behavior was surprising because it was not what was anticipated from the person in question.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
The phrase "you were right" means that the person being addressed accurately predicted or assessed a situation. It acknowledges that their judgment or perspective was correct.