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The phrase "write to me something" is not grammatically correct. It should be either "write something to me" or "write me something."
The correct past participle of "write" is "written." Therefore, the correct phrase would be "Have you written?"
The correct way to write it is "Have you had a chance?" "Did you had a chance?" is grammatically incorrect and should be "Did you have a chance?"
We would write either "How did it look?" or "What did it look like?"
No, it is not correct to write "some vocabulary is" without providing the intended comparison or context. This phrase is incomplete and lacks specificity. It is important to clarify what you are trying to convey for a more accurate statement.
That is the correct expression, "It's time to swallow the bullet.", which is a way of saying that something difficult or unpleasant must be faced. It is a mix up of "bite the bullet", "a bitter pill to swallow", and "swallow your pride"; all have related meanings. <<>> Soldiers were given a bullet to bite before battlefield surgery in the days before anaesthetics. No-one ever aimed to swallow so this is a non-metaphor.
The phrase "write to me something" is not grammatically correct. It should be either "write something to me" or "write me something."
The phrase should be "My father was right" (correct). The homophone (sound alike word) write means to write something down.
The correct past participle of "write" is "written." Therefore, the correct phrase would be "Have you written?"
The correct way to write it is "Have you had a chance?" "Did you had a chance?" is grammatically incorrect and should be "Did you have a chance?"
"If you're lucky" is the correct spelling of the phrase. Since you mean to write, "If you are lucky," you must include the apostrophe to indicate the contraction.
Ur ball sack
We would write either "How did it look?" or "What did it look like?"
it would be My father was right. as in correct not, write as in writing something down.
In running text or prose, you should write "one-to-one." For a headline or in a bullet list, "1-to-1" is fine.
HELL YEA, why wouldn't bullet write thyre own song? no one has a better creativity than bullet, so why would someone else write theyre song?
No, it is not correct to write "some vocabulary is" without providing the intended comparison or context. This phrase is incomplete and lacks specificity. It is important to clarify what you are trying to convey for a more accurate statement.