No, the word 'staff' is plural, therefore the staff 'are' here.
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
The correct phrase is "both genders."
The verb tense is the same in both examples. Both examples can be used correctly."Where were you?" is a complete sentence."Where you were" is not complete on its own. "Is that where you were standing?"
It is correct to say that club dues is due. This can be explained as follows: As when we say ,"internal custom duties was abolished". then here is the plural form of Duty is duties but we use the singular verb I.e, was and in the similar way here dues is the plural form of of Due. so we use here the singular form of verb i.e, is
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
The staff was is correct
Depends on how you say it, Examples..... (The dining staff are all in the kitchen.) or... (The dining staff is going to do the honor.)
I think so, you can say ex-staff member or ex-employee.
The correct grammar for the sentence would be: "All staff use whole group instruction." Change "uses" to "use" to match the plural subject "staff."
The more correct way to say this would be "It is humbling to be here". You can, as an alternative, say "I am humbled to be here."
Neither is grammatically correct.
The word staff is usually uncountable and has no plural.
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
Yes
Me is correct here.
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
No it's not correct grammar. You don't say "Myself is here." You say "I am here," so you would say "John and I are here."