No. It would be better written: "He is a talented boy" or "The boy is talented."
no it is not a correct sentence.
No, it is not correct. the word after "home" should be has So, it should be "The boy who had gone out of home has not returned yet"
the correct answer is theirs a boy and a girl in the car
The correct spelling is bitten. The boy was bitten by the dog. (passive sentence construction) better written as: The dog bit the boy. (active sentence construction)
The correct sentence would be... sherry needs a new brake on her motorcycle before she'll be able to race.
Yes, the sentence "the boy and the rabbit are in the park" is grammatically correct. It correctly uses subject-verb agreement, where the plural subjects "the boy and the rabbit" are matched with the plural verb "are."
no it is not a correct sentence.
This sentence is not correct. You don't need the 'be' verb was. The dirty boy took a bath. This sentence is past simple. The dirty boy = subject took = verb - past tense of take bath = object
If it's just those four words, then it should be "Who is here today?" If it's part of a longer statement, then either could be correct, depending on if it's plural or singular. "The boys who are here today" "The boy who is here today."
The boy persevered, to get his act into the talent show.
you can say either, both are grammatically correct
Only one sentence is correct. The correct sentence would be "He saw me going there".
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be "The boy could blow out the candle." The verb "blow" needs to be in the base form after "could."
Ecstacy isn't a word. Ecstasy is. Ecstasy means happiness. Ecstasy is a adjective, such as The boy's face suddenly shot up a face of ecstasy.Second, I don't feel comfortable about answering something to a "Gay" person.Or Homosexual if you will. Or Bisexual. Your choice.
No, it is not correct. the word after "home" should be has So, it should be "The boy who had gone out of home has not returned yet"
Not quite, it should be, "Do the surgery regardless of whether it is a boy or a girl."
The effect is to make the reader question whether the apostrophe was correct. "It's cold today so I will wear a jumper" or "It's a boy!" are correct.