You would say, "What is this in English?"
That is not a word in English, but it could be a sentence if you change the words a bit. Ask who even told you the word in English to say it again and see if there are pauses and if they are then there seprate words.
instead of saying England change the land part to english
Are u squrred with me?
Not a correct shortened form of words. You should write/say 'It had'.
The present simple tense of the verb 'to be' is: Singular # I am ... # You are ... # He'she/it is ... Plural # We are ... # You are ... # They are ... 'You is' is not standard or correct English grammar, although in some dialects, and particularly within certain groups of people, this form is in common use.
To conjugate a verb is to change it to fit the sentence. To conjugate run you could say: I run, He/She runs, We run, They run. Conjugation in the English language usually only applies to the He/She form as said.
That is not a word in English, but it could be a sentence if you change the words a bit. Ask who even told you the word in English to say it again and see if there are pauses and if they are then there seprate words.
How about you express the question in, oh, I don't know, let's say English? As the sentence shown here is largely meaningless.
I'm not sure what you are trying to say. As an English sentence it doesn't mean anything. Are you trying to say "Nick is the best student in English classes"?
The Spanish sentence "Cuando son sus cumpleanos?" means "When are your birthdays?" in English.
They say sentence structure is great. Learn english, bub.
No. Instead say, "Please see the attached report" or "The report is attached". "Attache" is not the proper form in English for a past participle, the grammatical entity needed in these sentence.
Your sentence is not correct as it contains a two negatives - did'nt and no. In the English language double negatives cancel each other out and form a weak positive. In conversation you could say 'he did not have legs'
instead of saying England change the land part to english
In English, it is "five".
You don't! There is not a verb form of the word. Rewrite your sentence using the noun form "cohesion," as in "In order to add cohesion to the materials...."
That's not even a good sentence in English...