The answer is" "When will you come". Let's use it in a sentence: "When will you come to the Netherlands, Mitch, asked Dinie Slothouber".If you want to use "when are you..." then you use the present participle of come - coming - not come.When are you coming?Both 'when are you coming' and 'when will you come are talking' about the future.
You use "come to be" in a sentence as shown in the following. He will come to be the best president in history.
You use 'comes' with the third person singular: he, she or it comes. For all other forms you use 'come'.
"I have invited my friends to come over this evening."
Where are you come from isn't grammatically correct. But both where are you from or Where do you come from- are correct. Use: Natives speakers usually use: Where are you from, when they think that the person spoken to is from the same country the speaker is in. Where do you come from is used when the speaker doesn't know the person's country he is speaking to. But both the sentences are correct and they are in everyday use as well. M. S.
A twerp is defined as a person with no influence or a ridiculous person. Other words for twerp include stooge, dunce, nonentity, pip-squeak, and twit.
Twerp is the correct spelling (to mean "a fool" or "someone who can be teased/bullied easily")
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Icky Twerp The Electronic Babysitter - 2009 was released on: USA: 1 May 2009 (limited)
The cast of Twerp - 2013 includes: Ashley Doran as Ms. Roy Max Fortin as Max Amber Mangalindan as Jessie
no, he is jumped up smarmy twerp
slurp, twerp, chirp
She's in the farm at the top corner.
Trip trap twerp
Dweeb? It is twerp
Its a British slang term for a fool or a person regarded as insignificant and contemptible. an annoying person
That means your a little twerp that hasn't hit puberty. stop jackin off... lol