few of the students are
a group of students was asked
Because "to correct" is only the base form of the verb when it is listed in translation dictionaries. to read, to listen, etc. When you actually say or write it, you would say "I read," "I listen," "I correct." You only add the to if you are saying you "want to" do something, like "I want to correct my students," or "I want to drive the car." If you are actually doing it, then you drop the to. Saying why to correct students is asking why and addressing that question toward students that are correct or who have been correct in the past. Saying why correct students could be a third person reference instead of a 2nd person address like in the first case.
The correct form is the students' books.
Yes, the relative pronoun 'who' is the correct pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'students' in both parts of the sentence."The students who take this deadline seriously are the students who are accepted."
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
It depends on the context. If the students are acting individually, then "are" is correct: Three-quarters of the students are failing the class. If you are referring to a single collective entity then "is" is correct: Three quarters of the students is an unacceptable number of failures.
The meaning is unclear, but I can think of no case in which that would be the correct phrasing to use. "Students, that's incompetence" might in some situations be correct, if one is addressing the students and desiring to point out a specific incidence of incompetence. Or, if one is speaking of the incompetence of the students themselves, "students who are incompetent" might be appropriate.
The sentence "There will be prizes for the students." is grammatically correct. It conveys the message that prizes will be awarded to the students.
all of the answers are correct for A+ students
The correct grammar should be: "The biggest spenders are us students who are interested in fashion." The pronoun "us" is used because it is the object of the preposition "are" in this sentence.
"A few meters away from our home" is not a correct grammar but the correct one is "Few meters away from our home."
92.73%