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This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
If you are referring to this sentence, no, it does not resemble a correct phrase AT ALL.
The phrase breaks no rules, but it is not a sentence.
If it's used as a question, yes. If not, then it is a correct phrase but not a complete sentence.
Yes, "to embark on your next journey" is grammatically correct. It means to start or begin your upcoming adventure or experience.
The correct sentence should be: "Keep the door closed."
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
No, the correct phrase is "he knew winter was coming." The word "had" is unnecessary in this sentence.
This is a phrase, not a sentence. It lacks any sort of verb or predicate to qualify it as a sentence.
No, that wouldn't be a complete sentence. You could end a phrase with are. eg You are stupid. No I am not. You are!
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
Neither is correct. The correct phrase is 'goes shopping' (no for no to) He goes shopping on a Monday.