He has agreed to terms, conditions & salary of SCI.
Both "agreed on" and "agreed to" are correct, but they are used in slightly different contexts. "Agreed on" is used to refer to reaching a mutual understanding or consensus about a specific topic or idea. "Agreed to" is used when referring to accepting or giving consent to a proposal, plan, or course of action.
i am agreed or i agree
No, "agreed" is a correct and commonly used past tense form of the verb "agree." You can use it in sentences like "We agreed to meet at 3 p.m." or "I agreed with her suggestion."
I agreed to drive the kids to band practice. The neighbor agreed to watch my dog while I was away.
I think you mean unanimous, as in everyone agreed, so the decision was unanimous.
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
i am agreed or i agree
He agreed with You
Agreed is the past tense of agree.
It has been agreed that no one will violate the contract. The union and management have been agreed for weeks. BOTH are correct. The key factor determining correctness is the subject, which you have omitted from your query.
Yes.
No, "agreed" is a correct and commonly used past tense form of the verb "agree." You can use it in sentences like "We agreed to meet at 3 p.m." or "I agreed with her suggestion."
That is the correct spelling of "approved" (agreed, endorsed).
I agreed to drive the kids to band practice. The neighbor agreed to watch my dog while I was away.
accepted, permitted, official, agreed, appropriate, correct, sanctioned, ratified
The method that everyone has agreed to use.
I think you mean unanimous, as in everyone agreed, so the decision was unanimous.
She generously agreed and it was fabulous to have her.