Both are correct, but they are used in different contexts. "It is broken" is present tense, indicating that something is currently not functioning properly. "It was broken" is past tense, indicating that something was not functioning properly in the past.
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
The correct grammar is: "Are those correct?"
The correct grammar for this sentence is: "When did you send it?"
No, the correct grammar would be "I hate you the way you hate me."
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
Both are correct, but "Was the camera broken?" is more common and sounds more normal then "Had the camera broken?"
"It is broken." Broken is an adjective. Broke is a verb, the past tense of to break.
Since 'hoped' is past tense, the correct rendition would be "You hoped that the speaker of your iPhone was just broken."
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.
The correct grammar is: "Are those correct?"
"On a train" is correct grammar.
The correct grammar for this sentence is: "When did you send it?"
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
No, the correct grammar would be "I hate you the way you hate me."
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
its has he kissed you yet that's the correct grammar-Erendiraa