"You are going there" is correct if the speaker is not at the location being referred to. "You are coming there" is correct if the speaker is already at the location being referred to.
The correct spelling is "coming."
The correct statement is: "Are your children coming home?"
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
Yes, "She's coming with us" is correct grammar. It is a shortened form of "She is coming with us."
The sentence "when you r coming" is not correct grammatically. It should be "When you are coming."
coming..
That is the correct spelling of "preceding" (coming before).*The similar word meaning "going ahead" is proceeding.
The correct spelling is "coming."
You could say either of those. They mean pretty much the same thing, with a slight difference in emphasis. if we say that someone is coming in, it is probably the case that we are in a building, and he is going to enter, for a while, the building where we are--whether or not this is his final destination. if he is coming by, then he is probably going other places, and we are at one of the stops he is going to make.
They are going is correct.
Coming
The correct statement is: "Are your children coming home?"
2012
The correct spelling is "coming." "Coming" is the present participle of the verb "come," used to indicate that someone or something is arriving or approaching.
No, the correct phrase is "he knew winter was coming." The word "had" is unnecessary in this sentence.
Yes, "She's coming with us" is correct grammar. It is a shortened form of "She is coming with us."
We are going to the Jones is the correct one.