It might be plumbed wrong -- or either your sewer is stoping up --
No it only decreases the amount of work unless you are using it for the wrong reasons
Error-whenwe are doing something wrong......this is errer.....and How to correct it......is our problem.
When it comes to electrical wiring all connections can be wired wrong. This is when an electrician is called to correct the mistake.
because people don't realize what they are doing-and they think that's nothing wrong with the environment
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
Yes. There's nothing wrong with it grammatically.
Grammatically correct, maybe, but idiomatically wrong. We normally say "buy it for me."
yes
There is nothing grammatically wrong with the sentence "We were wondering."
Yes, the phrase 'what they're doing' is grammatically correct. For example: What they're doing is wrong.
no, it's grammatically wrong
No its wrong. Use "he went to sea alone"..
Personally, I don't think there is anything wrong with it. Personally, I believe I am correct.
Its problem is not grammatical, but idiomatic. We say take an exam, or sit for an exam, but we do not say attend an exam. A sentence may be grammatically correct and still wrong.
The grammatically correct version in American English is "Even when you're right, you're wrong."
Yes, as the object of a verb or a preposition: I saw Bob; I saw her; I saw Bob and her. Some people think "her and Bob" sounds better, but it is not any more correct. There is nothing wrong grammatically with the construction 'Bob and her' as the object of a verb. Whether it sounds better or worse than 'her and Bob' is a question of usage or taste, not of grammar.