correct !
yes it is correct but it might be better to say 'she is an actress' instead
A guest is someone who has been invited to a program. So in my knowledge, it will be inappropriate to say or use "invited guest". Thanks
well it is correct but the grammar is wrong instead say "are you good at swimming" they both mean the same but this sentence a correct pronunciation.No. We say we are good at something if we mean that we do it well. The sentence "You are good in swimming" might be correct, but only if "swimming" is the name of a course of study, just as we might say "You are good in French," meaning you get get high marks in French class.
Yes, but it might be better to say "After you complete this process, repeat it for the next frame."
Not incorrect grammatically, but whoever you say that to might think you're laying it on a bit thick.
Yes, it is correct to say "which presentations to attend is your choice" because it emphasizes that the decision of attending specific presentations is up to the individual's discretion.
The correct phrase is "in achieving." This preposition is used to indicate the process or action of reaching a goal or result. For example, you might say, "She played a crucial role in achieving the project's success."
Yes, it is correct to say "I will be present during the meeting next week." This conveys your intention to attend the meeting and be physically there.
Its problem is not grammatical, but idiomatic. We say take an exam, or sit for an exam, but we do not say attend an exam. A sentence may be grammatically correct and still wrong.
No, it should be "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting"."Neither he nor you" is a compound subject, so you need to use the subjective form of the pronouns. "Him" is the objective form, so it is not correct here. One way to test this is to simplify the sentence by using a simple subject instead of a compound subject: It is easier to see that you would say "he expects to attend" and not "him expects to attend".There is another aspect of this example that can be confusing: "he" and "you" take different forms of the verb "expect": you would say "he expects to attend", but "you expect to attend". The rule in this case is to use the verb form that is correct for the subject closer to it. That is why it is correct to say "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting" rather than "neither he nor you expects to attend the meeting".
That is not quite correct. If you are going to call someone a former wife, you have to say whose former wife she is, such as my former wife is unable to attend the hearing, or Fred's former wife is unable to attend the hearing. If you don't know whose former wife she is, just say she is unable to attend the hearing. Otherwise it just sounds silly.
yes it is correct but it might be better to say 'she is an actress' instead
There are two subjects here, and so the verb is plural: invite.
=The correct thing to say is "discuss" ,not "discuss about".==Or we might say "the discussion was about....."=
A guest is someone who has been invited to a program. So in my knowledge, it will be inappropriate to say or use "invited guest". Thanks
No. The correct way to say it might be: You are born in May. Are you born in May? I am born in May. You were born on May 22.
The negative form of "might" is "might not." It is used to express the possibility that something will not happen or is not true. For example, you could say, "She might not attend the meeting."