This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
The sentence contains three errors:The first person pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.The noun 'Monday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day. A proper noun is always capitalized.The preposition 'to' expresses a motion or direction of its object (you). There is no function for motion or direction in this request.The correct sentence is: 'Can I meet you on Monday?'Or, an appropriate preposition that can be added is 'with'; for example: 'Can I meet with you on Monday?'
Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct. 'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.' 'How will you know if you passed it?' 'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
Spell "friends" correctly and capitalize "Monday." The rest looks fine, assuming your friends really did have a good time.
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.
Neither is correct. The correct phrase is 'goes shopping' (no for no to) He goes shopping on a Monday.
yes it is correct. No it isn't. Any time on Monday, or Any time next Monday, or Any time on the Monday coming would be correct. And remember, okay is a slang word.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
The sentence contains three errors:The first person pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.The noun 'Monday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day. A proper noun is always capitalized.The preposition 'to' expresses a motion or direction of its object (you). There is no function for motion or direction in this request.The correct sentence is: 'Can I meet you on Monday?'Or, an appropriate preposition that can be added is 'with'; for example: 'Can I meet with you on Monday?'
The puppies are available for free would be the correct sentence to use.
Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct. 'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.' 'How will you know if you passed it?' 'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
were you able to input my time card data?
Spell "friends" correctly and capitalize "Monday." The rest looks fine, assuming your friends really did have a good time.
The sentence is not grammatically correct. A clearer version could be: "In the suburbs, the bus only runs Monday to Friday." This revision improves clarity by rearranging the words and adding necessary punctuation.
Neither. Monday is a proper noun, so the correct phrase would be "Monday's practice schedule times."
No. Either is singular. It should be "Is either of you available?"The reason that this sounded correct is that the second person uses "are" whether it is singular or plural, as in "Are you available?" And if you are not referring to immediately available, there is the future tense "Will either of you be available?"
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.