No ! In America we speak broken English according to the the people in England.
It is 'you are always' and not 'you always' in a sentence for the purposes of correct grammar.
a - he always does it
not always
They're
He is late. We are early. I am always right on time.
No, they are always incorrect.
Using the correct capitalization and a more appropriate relative pronoun will make it a correct sentence:'She called me while I was there'
"Your presence is always there and love" is not a correct sentence. You might write "you and your love are always here for me."
3 incorrect sentences (for example)Here are some incorrect sentences:i want to go to the store. (the word "I" needs capitalization)I dont like to go swimming (1. No ' between dont 2. no period)Some People Want To Be President. (capitalization)There are many more incorrect sentences. (I suppose over 1,000,000 incorrect sentences.)An incorrect sentence is one where the punctuation is not correct. Examples above.Or where the grammar is not correct eg I am go to school every day. (Don't need 'be' verb am )Or where the spelling is not correct eg I don't like swiming. (swimming)Or where the word order is not correct eg I go always to the library. (always should come before go)etc etc etc etc.
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence. But that does not mean that it is always a good way to begin one.
The phrase "Always go in search for the correct idiom" is #39 on a list called "The Bestest Guide to Gooder English". The idiom in the sentence is "go in search for" and it's not incorrect,really, but just kind of strange. "Use appropriate idioms" or "If you're going to use an idiom, make sure it's appropriate" would be better, I imagine.The one on that list I haven't figured out is #40, "3D96#" Anybody know that one?
No. This is incorrect. We always say 'India has".
number 1 is correct because it is a complete sentence
"Who sells it?" is correct (always capitalize the first letter of a sentence).
It is 'you are always' and not 'you always' in a sentence for the purposes of correct grammar.
Yes, the sentence "She does not always complete her homework" is correct.
Would you mind to close the door. Is it correct English to use it? "Would you mind closing the door." is correct. Well, "would you mind to close the door" is an incorrect sentence. "would you mind closing the door" is correct. Because when you "enjoy" or "mind" are always followed by -ing. Since your sentence include "mind" you would use closing. Actually' would you mind closing the door'? is a question,and mind is a verb followed by a gerund that's why you need to say' closing 'instead of' to close'