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there is nothing wrong with this sentence
I loved my shop class , which started yesterday.(Note, it is all in the past tense, as it happened yesterday.)
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
The term "very sorry for having done wrong" is a sentence fragment (there is no subject to form a complete sentence). The abstract noun in the sentence fragment is "wrong" a word for a concept.
yes
Not really. The "under development scheme" is particularly wrong.
The verbs love and start do not agree, since they express actions that happened at different times; replacing start with started would fix the sentence.
No. Depending on the context of the sentence it should be If you have had a consultation or if you have done so, with consultation, blah blah
you should say that you are sorry for what you have done.
She said, "Mr Johnson never did anything wrong to me" which carried the innuendo that he had done something wrong to someone else.
No, because the order is wrong. The phrase should be: "would not have done" or "wouldn't have done" instead.
Our homework is done at the table by us.