Incorrect is not a verb. It's an adjective.
Tryouts is a incorrect verb.
Yes, it is incorrect. Even though the pronoun "you" can be singular or plural, it is ALWAYS used with a plural verb! The verb "was" is singular, so that is incorrect.
"Wrong" can be a verb, an adjective, or a noun. An example of its use as a verb is "They wrong their political enemies by always describing them as motivated by greed."
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
Yes. Is normal in British Standard English to use a plural verb with a collective noun, such as council, team, staff or government. In the United States it is archaic but not incorrect.
Tryouts is a incorrect verb.
Yes, it is incorrect. Even though the pronoun "you" can be singular or plural, it is ALWAYS used with a plural verb! The verb "was" is singular, so that is incorrect.
An incorrect verb tense occurs when a verb does not match the time frame of the action it is describing in a sentence. For example, using "will go" instead of "went" in a sentence describing a past event would be an incorrect verb tense.
The sentence "I will go to the store yesterday to buy groceries" has mixed verb tenses and is incorrect.
"Wrong" can be a verb, an adjective, or a noun. An example of its use as a verb is "They wrong their political enemies by always describing them as motivated by greed."
Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
An adjective describes a verb, and an adverb describes a noun
The verb is not incorrect, it is missing. The sentence should be "You had better go inside before you take sick."
"It" is a singular subject so it requires a singular verb. Any plural verb following "it" is incorrect (unless "it" is part of a compound subject).
The incorrect verb is "keep." It should be "keeps" to agree with the singular subject "Somebody."
The word 'truant' may be used as a verb. Although, some people view this as incorrect usage and recommend 'to play truant'.
No, "I remember nothing" is not incorrect grammar. It is a complete sentence where the subject ("I") and the verb ("remember") are properly used.