The latter form is grammatically correct but the former is in popular usage.
You should say for your convenience it is *gramatically correct-*just means correct
The correct form should be 'neatest.'
This sentence should be correct.
You could say " It's him ! The man I saw following us." Or you could say " It's he who wants to go not I."
yes it is correct but it is informal language; therefore you shouldn't use it in proper language. you can also say "Thursday's okay with me." or you could say "Thursday's fine for me." but all of these are correct in general
Have gone is correct
You could say" This deer is medium-sized." or you could say " The deer is a medium-sized animal. "
Well, if you are she, and she is you, then you could properly say, "This is she." If I call you on the phone, and ask for you, and you say, "this is she," you are correct. Easy way to tell if you should say "she: or "her" -- say the sentence backwards. You woudn't say HER IS (this or any other adjective) but you would say "SHE IS (adjective).
Nope. It should be "He should have..."
No, the correct way to say that would be... "You should just go to work"
You should say "you could be reached on a phone no", not "you could be reached at a phone no"But the no at the end of both your phrases is also grammatically incorrect.So you should really say "you could not be reached on a phone," if I understand correctly the meaning of you phrase.
You should say for your convenience it is *gramatically correct-*just means correct
No, it is not correct grammatically. The correct phrasing would be "Should I take these?" or "Should I take these ones?"
It depends on what you're trying to say. If you had the possibility of being a doctor, you could have been a doctor. If it was in your best interest to be a doctor, you should have been a doctor. Or if you're trying to distinguish between "could of" and "could have", it should be, you could have been a doctor.
The correct form should be 'neatest.'
No but you could say are you up to dance.
No, it is not correct to say "Are you going to the park or no." It would be more grammatically correct to say "Are you going to the park or not?"