Bill has to be made accordingly. yes that is a sentence.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
The grammatically correct sentence would be: Did you make a mess? I made a mess. You made a mess. A mess is made, not done.
'In lieu of my absence' is a phrase, not a sentence. As a phrase, it is grammatically correct, and could form part of a sentence, although it is not easy to think of such a sentence. It means 'Instead of my being absent ... ' So, how about 'In lieu of my absence, you have my presence!' as a jocular exclamation made by someone who turns up at a meeting for which s/he has previously given an apology for absence.
Bills of attainder were used in the 18th century in england...made by nicole :* luv you all
"You make me smile". "Makes" is the third person singular, used when the Subject is a noun (in the singular), plus a pronoun like he, she, it, this, that a.s.o.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
Exactly as you wrote it: The members of the Board made a decision. Capitalizing "Members" may also be acceptable
The correct useage would be "Were 200 pieces made." "Were" is used with plural and "pieces" is plural.
They made sure the profits were divided in the correct proportions.
It would be better to say "Payment should be made once"
The grammatically correct sentence would be: Did you make a mess? I made a mess. You made a mess. A mess is made, not done.
There is nothing incorrect about saying 'it is what made her happy' providing that 'it' has been clearly defined previously in the sentence or paragraph.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. It describes how the streetlight is casting long, scary shadows on the sidewalk.
The correct sentence is - The boys made a lot of noise
That acrobat made an amazing stunt. Correct: The acrobatics of the man on the highwire were truly amazing.
"Is made" is in the present tense and "was made" is in the past tense. The choice between the two depends on the context of the sentence. Use "is made" when referring to something that currently exists or happens, and "was made" when referring to something that occurred in the past.
'In lieu of my absence' is a phrase, not a sentence. As a phrase, it is grammatically correct, and could form part of a sentence, although it is not easy to think of such a sentence. It means 'Instead of my being absent ... ' So, how about 'In lieu of my absence, you have my presence!' as a jocular exclamation made by someone who turns up at a meeting for which s/he has previously given an apology for absence.