The error in the sentence is that "ahead of time" and "in advance" mean the same thing, it is a duplication.
The sentence should read:
I would like to be informed ahead of time.
Or,
I would like to be informed in advance.
The correct sentence is "Did you inform." In this case, "inform" is the base form of the verb, and when forming a question in the past tense using "did," the base form of the verb should be used (e.g., "did you inform," "did you eat," "did you go"). "Have you informed" is used in present perfect tense to indicate an action that was completed at some point in the past with relevance to the present.
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Grammatical accuracy is obtained when each word in a sentence represents the meaning the author intents to convey and are arrange in the correct order.
"Donna and I" is the correct form if used as the subject of the sentence (as in "Donna and I went for a walk."). "Donna and me" is used as the object ("She will call Donna and me.). Check the correctness of the pronoun by eliminating "Donna" and saying just the pronoun with the rest of the sentence. You would not say "Me went for a walk" nor "She will call I."
No this is grammatically incorrect. Some correct examples would be:Has she already been informed about this?Has she already informed him about this?Has she already informed them about this?
"We were informed it will be corrected today" is a correct sentence. However, it might sound a little better to say "We were informed that it will be corrected today."
Yes, that sentence is correct grammar.
The correct sentence is "Did you inform." In this case, "inform" is the base form of the verb, and when forming a question in the past tense using "did," the base form of the verb should be used (e.g., "did you inform," "did you eat," "did you go"). "Have you informed" is used in present perfect tense to indicate an action that was completed at some point in the past with relevance to the present.
Yes, the correctness of grammar in a sentence can be proven by ensuring that it follows the rules of syntax, punctuation, and word usage in the language it is written in. This can be done by checking for subject-verb agreement, proper sentence structure, and correct use of grammar rules such as tenses, pronouns, and modifiers.
No, "Is you are most invited" is not correct grammar. A more grammatically correct phrase would be "You are most welcome" or "You are invited." The sentence structure needs to be adjusted for clarity and correctness.
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Lion eating a deer is correct, Lotus growing in a lake is correct.
Correct spelling, punctuation, capitalization, grammer.
Grammatical accuracy is obtained when each word in a sentence represents the meaning the author intents to convey and are arrange in the correct order.
"Donna and I" is the correct form if used as the subject of the sentence (as in "Donna and I went for a walk."). "Donna and me" is used as the object ("She will call Donna and me.). Check the correctness of the pronoun by eliminating "Donna" and saying just the pronoun with the rest of the sentence. You would not say "Me went for a walk" nor "She will call I."
No this is grammatically incorrect. Some correct examples would be:Has she already been informed about this?Has she already informed him about this?Has she already informed them about this?
Question makes no sense, it is just a random collection of words within a grammatically correct sentence. However grammatical correctness alone does not generate meaning.