by the day*
The phrase "How has been the day to you?" is not correct in standard English. A more appropriate way to ask this would be, "How has your day been?" or "How was your day?" These alternatives clearly convey the intention of inquiring about someone's day.
Not a correct shortened form of words. You should write/say 'It had'.
Good day (two words) is correct.
Can you end my day with correct grammar
Yes, the sentence "She had a good day" is correct English.Specifically, everything agrees in number. For example, "she" is a feminine pronoun in its singular form. The verb "had" is a past form of the present infinitive "to have" in its expression as the third person singular. The word "a" serves as the correct form of the indefinite article to be linked with the singular noun "day."In other words, the sentence means "Things went well for her that day" or "Things went well for her today."
The phrase "How has been the day to you?" is not correct in standard English. A more appropriate way to ask this would be, "How has your day been?" or "How was your day?" These alternatives clearly convey the intention of inquiring about someone's day.
yes it's absolutely correct
correct your english...
It is a matter of opinion.
all are correct
no Day is not a Irish last name Correct, it is not of Irish origin. Instead, it is of English origin. But Day is sometimes used for O'Dea.
El Dia means "The Day" in Spanish/English translation.
The word 'de' is a misspelling in the otherwise correct Latin phrase 'in de domini'. The correct phrasing is the following: in die Domini. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'in' means 'in'; 'dei' '[the] day'; and 'Domini' 'of the Lord'. And so the English equivalent is exactly that: In the day of the Lord.
Not a correct shortened form of words. You should write/say 'It had'.
It is correct to say "such an exhausting day", and not 'Such an exhaustive day'.
Use on when referring to the two-day week-end holiday as a whole. At the week's end is used when simply referring to the end of the week.
According to the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, the correct spelling is "New Year's Day." To read more about this on Answers.com, see the Related Link.