I can only guess at what you are trying to say, but I guess that this sentence should have been, understand it in your own home. You don't have to go to school to learn about this; you can understand it in your own home.
Grammatically correct but idiomatically awkward and unclear. Do you mean something like Having a place to call home can mean different things to different people? Or is it really, as stated, that a place called home can have purposes of its own?
Babies are known to babble. Mothers usually understand their own baby's babble.
The correct answer is on your own...
LeastDuck, as you are a grrreat fan of deleting other people´s answer, try your own medicine. Like it, Ducky?
When beginning a dependent clause, but it must also contain an independent clause."Because of the new law, we cannot go hunting as planned." This sentence is correct because it contains a clause that can stand on its own, an independent clause."Because we cannot go hunting as planned." This sentence isn't correct because of the word "because", making the clause depend on another independent clause."We cannot go hunting as planned." This sentence is correct because it does not have the word "because", so it does not rely on another independent clause.
The correct sentence is He is allowed to do it on his own.
No. You would say "He is at home" if referring to his own home. You would say "He is in a home" when referring to a place like a retirement home or other medical facility that have people living in them as their home.
You already own a bicycle.
"The dog has its own collar" is grammatically correct. Many people mistakenly use "it's" in this kind of sentence, but that is the contraction for "it is," not the possessive form of "it."
Do you own a computer? Grammatically it makes sense as a question. You do own a computer would be a suitable answer.
If you don't do your own homework, it is a certainty that you will not understand the material as well.
If you don't do your own homework, it is a certainty that you will not understand the material as well.
Grammatically correct but idiomatically awkward and unclear. Do you mean something like Having a place to call home can mean different things to different people? Or is it really, as stated, that a place called home can have purposes of its own?
No. This is a clause that cannot stand on its own. It is not a complete sentence. A sentence needs a subject and a verb.
Why is it that you are not happy to do your own home work
Babies are known to babble. Mothers usually understand their own baby's babble.
The correct answer is on your own...