Unfortunately no.
The correct phrase is "I will see you tomorrow." Alternately, you could say either "I will see you Monday", or "I will see you on Monday" -- with the proper noun "Monday", either is correct. "Tomorrow", however, is not a proper noun and thus "on" must be omitted.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
Almost but not quite. The grammatically correct wording is "Please see the attached agenda." As a shorthand, you could also say "Please see agenda (attached)."
yes it is right just add the capital letter at the front for the T and it is correct.
No- Hope this helped!=) Another answer. I don' see anything wrong with saying, "It snowed yesterday." You could also say, "Yesterday, it snowed."
Yes, and in many cases it would be preferred. "See you tomorrow" is very informal.
'You see the sadness in my eyes.' is grammatically correct: Subject: you Verb: see Article: the Direct object: sadness Preposition: in Possessive adjective: my Object of the preposition: eyes
The infinitive should be used. "Planning to see" is correct.
Yes, it's fine.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. It is clear and concise.
Whom did you see is correct, and is required in writing. In speech, people generally say "Who did you see?"
Yes that's grammatically correct.
No, I think the correct way is- Is this the first time you've seen it?
No, it would be more appropriate to say "Please see the attached document" or "Please see the attached file." The term "subject" is typically used to refer to the main topic of an email or message.
Yes, the phrase "please see attached letter" is grammatically correct. However, it might be more formal to say "please find attached the letter" or "I have attached the letter for your reference."
"What would you do if you saw a UFO?" is the grammatically correct form of this sentence.(No sentence with the letter "u" in place of the word "you" is going to be correct.)The structure and meaning of the sentence call for the subjunctive form of the verb (the subjunctive mood). The "if" statement is what we call "conditional, contrary to fact." It is speculative. You are not saying that you do see a UFO. You are saying "IF." The subjunctive lets us talk about things that aren't real or things that we don't know without making it sound like they are facts.For the verb "to see," the appropriate subjunctive form is "saw." Notice that this is exactly parallel to the "would" form of "will" that you have here in the same sentence.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
I don't see a problem with it, but 'extremely difficult to find' is better.