John and Mary, I am going to town, do you want to come too?
The correct phrasing is "I want to present this award to Mary."
The sentence "Is Mary not Happy" is correct grammatically as a question. It defines Mary as the subject and not happy as the object. In the other sentence, though grammatically correct, it could be confusing. Not Mary could be construed as all people but Mary. I would use the first sentence, as it is clearest.
The correct form is "Mary and I" when the pronoun is the subject of a sentence. For example, "Mary and I went to the store."
Yes, very!
it was me and mary who planned the holiday
"Write a simple sentence" is a simple sentence. Other examples: The dog buried the bone. Mary sang. George snorted. Pedro had breakfast.
In the sentence, "Mary parents gave her a watch at her party." the noun Mary is the incorrect form. The noun 'Mary' should be the possessive form to show that the 'parents' are the parents of Mary.The correct sentence is: "Mary'sparents gave her a watch at her party."The nouns in the sentence are:Mary'sparentswatchparty
Yes, a sentence can have an indirect object without a direct object. For example, in the sentence "I gave Mary a book," "Mary" is the indirect object and "a book" is the direct object. Removing "a book" still leaves a grammatically correct sentence: "I gave Mary."
Mary is an ordinary girl but her demeanor is like that of royalty.
Mary, Tom, Bob, and Terri went to the show.
Yes, if they are the subject of the verb: Mary and I have books. No, if they are not the subject of the verb: Give the books to Mary and me. 28ca105a-4d21-45a8-8acb-bdd1b00d31de 1.03.01