Seems in correct. It would be nice if 'by' replaces 'through'
The sentence is almost correct. However, it should be "You sent it through DHL yesterday."
This sentence is correct.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
The correct grammar for this sentence is: "When did you send it?"
Sent is past tense. accordingly, i did "send" the letter yesterday?" implies past tense, no? In the sentence above the word "did" is a helping verb to the word "send" so the words "did send" is the verb. The correct past tense of 'send' is 'sent'.
No, the sentence "Is this sentence you have sent no messages from the morning?" is not grammatically correct. It should be revised to: "Have you not sent any messages since this morning?"
The wind was strong enough to wind the sails on the boat.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
No, this is not correct. 'Yesterday' indicates past time but 'send' is the present tense of the verb. It is not idiomatic to use the perfect tense with 'yesterday'. The past tense should be used. Here are some possible constructions: Past tense: 'You sent [it] yesterday.' 'Did you send [it] yesterday?' Perfect tense: 'You have sent [it] already; there is no need to send it again.' 'Have you sent [it] yet?'
"You and him" is correct in a sentence such as, "I sent the tickets to you and him," versus a sentence such as, "You and he should send the tickets to me."
Yes, it is correct. You are correct to use "who" and not "whom" because "who" is the subject of the clause "who has sent him."
Better to say: We were sent the following samples through TNT on ..................(the date should be clear, 01.04 isn't very clear). After this sentence there would be a list of the 'samples'.
which is sentence correct as stated below: we sent a fax on we sent a fax dated which is sentence correct as stated below: we sent a fax on we sent a fax dated
Sent is past tense. accordingly, i did "send" the letter yesterday?" implies past tense, no? In the sentence above the word "did" is a helping verb to the word "send" so the words "did send" is the verb. The correct past tense of 'send' is 'sent'.
The sentence is acceptable.
No, the sentence "Is this sentence you have sent no messages from the morning?" is not grammatically correct. It should be revised to: "Have you not sent any messages since this morning?"
First it is an "invoice" not a "voice". Then the correct sentence is:- Dan reported that the contractor had sent in his invoice.
Sent for You Yesterday was created in 1983.
I think that because the word "text" is such a modern word that actually it could be either.