ofcourse NO! was is for singular pronouns
The correct answer is "in the morning".
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.
No. Salutations (hello, good morning, welcome, dear [Name]) are not capitalized unless some other rule (like the beginning of a sentence) requires their capitalization. For example: CORRECT: Good morning, Susan. CORRECT: I said good morning to John. CORRECT: Susan said, "Good morning, John." (The use of quotations makes this hello the beginning of a sentence spoken by Susan. Since a sentence always begins with a capital letter, hello is capitalized.) CORRECT: Susan said, "Tell John good morning for me." INCORRECT: I said Hello to John. INCORRECT: Good Morning, Susan. The reason these words tend to be incorrectly capitalized is their frequent use at the beginning of sentences. In reality, the only reason for their capitalization is to begin a sentence or a greeting in a letter. They should never be capitalized for emphasis or in the middle of a sentence out of habit. * The greeting in an email or letter counts as the beginning of a sentence. The first letter of the first word of a salutation would be capitalized: Good morning Susan, How are you today? ...
No, that's quite bad. It should be ...you have been blessed with a baby girl this morning. Or you could say ...you have been blessed with a baby girl today. Today morning is never said. You can say yesterday morning, or tomorrow morning.
Nothing dreadfully wrong with that sentence, but it does repeat itself, in that '10am' means '10 o'clock in the morning' (evening would be pm). So shorter forms would be 'Tomorrow morning at 10' or 'Tomorrow at 10am'.
The correct answer is "in the morning".
They're both "correct" if the rest of the sentence is written properly, but the "on" form is more common and is less likely to make you sound ultra-pretentious.
No, the sentence "Is this sentence you have sent no messages from the morning?" is not grammatically correct. It should be revised to: "Have you not sent any messages since this morning?"
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.
This morning, I watched TV before I drove here. I watched television this morning before I drove here.
I take a walk every morning, It's a long walk from my house to the library.
No. Salutations (hello, good morning, welcome, dear [Name]) are not capitalized unless some other rule (like the beginning of a sentence) requires their capitalization. For example: CORRECT: Good morning, Susan. CORRECT: I said good morning to John. CORRECT: Susan said, "Good morning, John." (The use of quotations makes this hello the beginning of a sentence spoken by Susan. Since a sentence always begins with a capital letter, hello is capitalized.) CORRECT: Susan said, "Tell John good morning for me." INCORRECT: I said Hello to John. INCORRECT: Good Morning, Susan. The reason these words tend to be incorrectly capitalized is their frequent use at the beginning of sentences. In reality, the only reason for their capitalization is to begin a sentence or a greeting in a letter. They should never be capitalized for emphasis or in the middle of a sentence out of habit. * The greeting in an email or letter counts as the beginning of a sentence. The first letter of the first word of a salutation would be capitalized: Good morning Susan, How are you today? ...
No, Incorrect Grammar. Actual sentence is. This morning she received one dozen of red roses from her husband.
No, the noun morning is not a plural, it should be a singular possessive form: morning's (the meeting of this morning)Possession is shown by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the singular noun."Here are the notes from this morning's meeting."
There are multiple ways this sentence could be corrected to. Two that I could think of are--"Since this morning, the rope lie near the gate.""The rope lie near the gate since morning."has lay should be 'lie', because lay's past tense is 'lie'.
No, that's quite bad. It should be ...you have been blessed with a baby girl this morning. Or you could say ...you have been blessed with a baby girl today. Today morning is never said. You can say yesterday morning, or tomorrow morning.
No it is not correct usage. Dawn is already referring to morning therefore you are saying morning twice. Stick with just dawn or just morning.