The incorrect word is "cats" It should be "cat's" Furthermore, "whiskers" should begin with a capital "W" Hence the sentence should be: My cat's name is Whiskers.
The sentence should read: "Your cat's name is Whiskers."
It should be "The time has come."
No you should not clip your pet's whiskers.
The incorrect form of the verb in the sentence is "take." It should be "get" instead, so the corrected sentence would be "You better go inside before you get sick."
No it's incorrect grammar. They should be used after a comma or after a conjunction at the beginning of the sentence. Ex. But, They......
It's incorrect. In this sentence "Test" is the object. Therefore it must be put into the accusative.The correct sentence should be:" Der Lehrer verbessert den Text".
There is an incorrect idiom in the sentence. Idioms are the common, generally very arbitrary ways that we speak our language. For example, in this sentence you have command of a language not in a language. The sentence should read: She has good command of English.
Sentence a has an incorrect singular possessive noun: Jesu's should be Jesus'.Sentence b has an incorrect plural noun: families should be family's.
When you put a preposition at the end of a sentence.For example: 'Where are we going to?'"To" is a preposition and should not be at the end of a sentence. Instead, you should say:'To where are we going?'But everybody just uses the incorrect form.
I would of liked to see that.The "of" should be have or 've
Yes. However, using "for to" in place of the preposition "to" is considered incorrect. In many cases, the sentence should not be separate from the preceding one, but should be a clause added to it.
You don't need the word "at" because asking "Where is the car?" is a sufficient question. Also, in English, the sentence should not end with a preposition, and "at" is a preposition.