An alternative TO.
Or
A substitute FOR
It is correct, meaning thoroughly defeated.
No. We say "kind of knowledge." In English we need the partitive genitive to follow "kind."
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
Non standard English is informal or not proper. It does not follow the structural, grammatical rules for correct English.Examples include slang such as "It ain't true" or colloquialisms such as "Y'all come back, now."
No, that is not correct English grammar.The correct way to ask is either:"What is this a picture of?""What does this picture show?"
It is correct, meaning thoroughly defeated.
The correct spelling in British English is organise."We will organise a fundraiser".The correct spelling in American English is organize."I will organize a family lunch".
Building.
follow up
No. We say "kind of knowledge." In English we need the partitive genitive to follow "kind."
is my names are a correct English
Yes it is correct english
In the UK, the correct English is known as either Standard English or The Queen's English.
follow-up
Mommy is correct in American English, Mummy is correct in English.
What happens if you don't follow correct uninstall procedures
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.