No. The phrase "where precious memories do not hurt" is not a sentence. It is a dependent clause.
Yes, things are on hold is grammatically correct.
Please provide the sentence or phrase in question so that I can accurately assess its grammar.
yes
No,it is not grammatically correct.
"How did you got her?" Is not a grammatically correct sentence, it might be better to rephrase it as "How did you gether?"
If you are asking the sentence it make sense grammatically, then yes, it does. Hope this helps :)
"And so are you" is grammatically correct used in an otherwise correctly structured sentence.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
That sentence is grammatically correct only if you are talking about a single item called "The Best Pictures." Otherwise, the correct form is "The best pictures will find their places in the museum."
Yes, "He poured water into the glass." is a grammatically correct sentence as long as the first word is capitalized and there is a period at the end.
Both "interceding for" and "interceding with" are grammatically correct phrases, but they can have slightly different meanings. "Interceding for" typically means asking on behalf of someone else, while "interceding with" can mean mediating or intervening in a situation. The choice between the two depends on the context and what you intend to convey.
The sentence "Is Mary not Happy" is correct grammatically as a question. It defines Mary as the subject and not happy as the object. In the other sentence, though grammatically correct, it could be confusing. Not Mary could be construed as all people but Mary. I would use the first sentence, as it is clearest.