The correct form of the verb "promise" in the sentence "He did as he promised." is already correct.
No, "Is felt" is not the correct form in the sentence. The correct form would be "She replied that she felt better."
'When did I come' is correct. In this sentence, the verb 'come' should be in its base form 'come' after the auxiliary verb 'did'.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be rephrased to "They were the pranksters."
No, the correct sentence is "I did not go yesterday." The verb "go" should be in its base form after "did not."
No, the correct sentence would be: "Is the sculpture free form?"
Elder should be corrected to older.
The form of this sentence is correct. She filled out the application form.
To make this sentence correct you should say "the plan has been met with opposition".
The sculpture was free-form. This is a correct sentence if you capitalize first letter.
No, "Is felt" is not the correct form in the sentence. The correct form would be "She replied that she felt better."
No, that sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be "Is the checkout of a text correct?" or "Is the text checkout correct?" for proper structure.
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when used as a possessive pronoun. Only use "its' " when it is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," and never as a possessive form.
first we will see the answer then we are write correct answer
The correct verb form would be "begun."
The sentence is correct exactly the way it is: "One of these disks is for you and Adam." "Is" is the correct form of the verb "to be" in this sentence, because its subject is "one," which takes the singular form of the verb. Note that if the sentence had started with "these disks," that would require a plural verb, and the correct form would be "These disks are for you and Adam."
The verb in that sentence is "take". It's not the correct form, though. The correct form is "takes".
Depending on the sentence, not unless could be the correct form.