Are your children coming home? is grammatically correct.
No. r is spelled are and the word order should be: When are you coming?
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
Coming is the correct spelling.
This afternoon you are coming to the Laboratory.
Yes, "She's coming with us" is correct grammar. It is a shortened form of "She is coming with us."
No. r is spelled are and the word order should be: When are you coming?
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
It depends on context. Are you answering a question? Answering a question with a short form of a sentence is a little different than just making a statement.For example:Did you know I am coming to town tomorrow?The email mentioned that.However, if you are just making a statement, you should explain "that".The email mentioned that Karen is coming to town tomorrow.
The children aren't learning, but the day of the final exam is coming! That would be more accurate.
No, that's just a silly, pseudo-correction of the idiomatic expression "where you are coming from." In the first place, the expression is too informal for serious writing, and cannot be made formal by "improving" its grammar. In the second place, the belief that an English sentence may not end with a preposition is an error: where you are coming from is correct bas it stands - but informal.
"From" is a preposition. It doesn't seem like it because we expect prepositions to be followed by some phrase. The grammatically correct version of your sentence would be "From where are you coming?" Prepositions show time (when something happened) or space (where something is located). "From where" is location.
Coming is the correct spelling.
Coming
This afternoon you are coming to the Laboratory.
Yes, "She's coming with us" is correct grammar. It is a shortened form of "She is coming with us."
It is correct to say "We look forward to hearing from you." As in the sentence " We look forward to their visit.", the word "to" in this idiom is a preposition followed by a noun/ noun phrase.
2012