These should not be mistaken for the related, albeit distinct, modern British grammar schools
He and i am going to school
The sentence, "They are going to the beach." is correct.
'Enrollment now going on' is correct.
'You were going to school' is the passive voice of 'You are going to school'.
Well, let's add some happy little corrections here! In September, he and I will start going to middle school. It's important to use "I" instead of "me" as the subject and "have" instead of "gots" to make our sentence sound just right. Just remember, there are no mistakes, only happy little accidents!
He and i am going to school
No, the correct statement is "Are you going to school?" using the verb "are" instead of "is."
The correct punctuation for the sentence "In September you and him get to start going to middle school" would be: "In September, you and he get to start going to middle school."
I like going to school to be with my friends and do different things not always for the learning but if what we are learning about is alright then i guess i go to school for that to. Answer: The sentence is not correct. The correct version would be "You like to go to school."
The correct form is "He went to school yesterday, didn't he?"
That will depend on the school and the style. In some places it only takes a few minutes, others will spend several hours going through all the basics.
The correct sentence is - Manish has gone to school to change his future
They are going is correct.
It depends. 'You had gone to school' - when something happened. 'You went to school.' - every day 'You were at school.'
We are going to the Jones is the correct one.
'Enrollment now going on' is correct.
Yes, funny as it sounds. When both elements of a neither/nor construction are singular, the verb will be singular. And when a verb has two personal pronouns for a subject, it agrees with the closest one. So we would say Neither I nor he is going to school, or Neither he nor I am going...