Yes, also one often hears " Could you ever imagine ..."
NO. These are correct; I could have punched I have punched I had punched I had been punched I have been punching I had been punching
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
I love you too, babe is the correct phrase
That is the correct spelling of "well thought out" but a synonymous phrase could be "thoroughly considered," also "contemplated" or planned.
Yes, correct but very awkward. It needs context. He could ever imagine what?
No, it is not.
The correct phrase is "I could have." "Could of" is incorrect and a common spelling mistake, as it sounds like "could've" when spoken due to contraction with "have."
"Can I join you?" is the most correct phrase. "Could I join you?" is also acceptable but may sound slightly more formal.
imagine ca
"Could you kindly provide" is the correct phrase. The word "could" typically comes before the verb in English sentences.
I'm not sure I understand your question. What phrase are you asking about, "children for school?" If that is what you mean, it could be correct depending on how it is used in the sentence. For example, a sentence such as "We must prepare the children for school." would be correct. If you make your question a bit clearer I could help more.
Perhaps if you would phrase the question the correct understandable way I could answer it the correct understandable way:)
NO. These are correct; I could have punched I have punched I had punched I had been punched I have been punching I had been punching
The term 'assigned reading,' in the context of school would be correct: a teacher could assign reading to a child. Any context where some sort of reading is assigned is correct.
The phrase "sneezing hard" is not correct grammar. The correct grammar could be a few things based on what you really meant.
'In the hope that' is the correct phrase.