I'm not exactly sure what your question is, but I suppose that in this scenario that would be why you are asking it. ;-)
Why do I want to work?
Why do you want to work?
Why does he/she/it want to work?
Why do we want to work?
Why do they want to work?
I hope any of the the above answers will help.
The correct way to say that phrase is "He must have."
These phrases are not correct or incorrect, they're expressions. Which you use would depend on what the people around you use. Someone I used to work with would often say, "by the by and by".
No. The correct way of saying it is: "I promised to send you".
Yes that is correct. (An easy way of remembering the difference is that you use 'too' when you want to say 'also'. e.g. 'Would you like to come too?')
No, the correct way is to say "He doesn't live there anymore"
No, the correct way to say that would be... "You should just go to work"
You can say "I just got off work."
You probably want to say: "Have you had a chance?" In the past, were you given an opportunity to do or try that? You could also say "Did you try it?"
If you want your family to say, "farewell" the correct way to tell them to do so is by saying, "family say, farewell."
i say do it in another way
Yes, it is correct, but rather literary, not to say old-fashioned in today's idiomatic English. In normal speech, the phrase is "You want him to be your friend" or "you want to be friends with him."
The correct way to say January 8th's is "January eighth's."
No, "she and you" is not correct. The correct way to phrase it would be "she and you."
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
No. The correct way to say it would be, "when midnight was rung in."
The correct way to say that phrase is "He must have."
No, I'm sorry it is not. The correct way to say it would be, "for your convenience."