No, it is not. The sentence would read "Looking out from your den you could see a wolf enter den". The second usage of den/quane should have a "the" in front of it. "Looking out from your den you could see a wolf enter the den."
"Looking out from your quane you could see a wolf enter the quane."
These would be correct.
Here you are: "Looking out from my quane, I could see a wolf enter the quane."
It is not a complete sentence by itself, but it is correct as part of a sentence such as: "We are looking forward to you support."
Yes this is grammatically correct.If you mean it to be a question then it would be "Are you looking forward to Monday?"If you mean to refer to yourself then it would be "I am looking forward to Monday."
More correctly it would be... Thank you for giving this matter your attention.
Grammatically you mean? Yes, it is correct.
The answer depends on whether you have only one team (team's) or many teams (teams').
It is not a complete sentence by itself, but it is correct as part of a sentence such as: "We are looking forward to you support."
"You were looking good" is the correct grammar. "You" is a second person pronoun that always takes the verb form "were" in past tense, regardless of the situation. "Was" is used with singular subjects, whereas "were" is used with plural subjects.
Yes this is grammatically correct.If you mean it to be a question then it would be "Are you looking forward to Monday?"If you mean to refer to yourself then it would be "I am looking forward to Monday."
The subject of the sentence is state, the subject is the class.An understood subject is a subject that is not stated in the sentence, usually an imperative sentence. Example:"Stop!" (the understood subject is you)"Bring me my glasses." (the understood subject is you)An understood subject can be a pronoun that has no antecedent, the subject is understood by the speaker and the person spoken to. Example:"Look, at her. She needs a fashion makeover" (only the speaker and listener know who is the subject of these sentences)"Oh, here is the one I've been looking for." (the speaker is likely holding up or gesturing toward the object referred to as 'the one')
"Looking forward to your marriage" is grammatically correct.
More correctly it would be... Thank you for giving this matter your attention.
A noun and a verb. Bob (noun) runs (verb) is a basic sentence. The noun may also be unwritten, but understood. RUN! is actually a sentence- If I am looking at you when I yell that, you understand that I mean you (the noun) should run.
"We are looking forward to your positive response to this request." This is the grammatically correct phrase. "On this request" or "for this request" would not be necessary for conveying the intended meaning.
The main idea is the central theme or message that the author is trying to convey throughout the essay or longer work. It's the overarching point that ties together the content and provides a focus for the reader to understand the purpose of the writing.
You need to answer this question because we don’t do homework and don’t have the article you read. Your teacher is looking for your critical thinking skills and how well you understood the lesson. He/she is not looking for our answers.
No, you would say "good-looking picture" or "the picture looks good."
Grammatically you mean? Yes, it is correct.