i am currently enrolled in a masters degree for public administration, and feel confident that i will be ready to accept your offer of employment.
You take the word, and put it in a gramatically correct sentence. :) *HEY NATALIE ;) FROM: BANANA*
I believe my offices and I are well known.
No. As 'you' refers to either second person singular or plural noun, it takes a plural verb of 'to be'. As you want to refer to the past tense in your sentence, the plural verb of 'to be' in the past tense is 'were'. The correct sentence should be like this: You were not there.
would you pass me the sugar please
No, it is not correct. the word after "home" should be has So, it should be "The boy who had gone out of home has not returned yet"
The sentence is gramatically correct.
Yes, you can begin a sentence with the word "or" when presenting options or alternatives. For example, "Or you can choose to study abroad for a semester."
No 'It's for you' would be though
No because and is a fanboy and it would not be gramatically correct
It's a weird sentence, but it is grammatically correct.
That's not even a complete sentence. The words TO, SAT, THIS, PEOPLE and IS can not be combined in any way to make a grammatically correct sentence. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Assuming the question should be Is it gramatically correct to say, "This people is..."? then it is not correct. One should say, "These people are...".
Yes, but it depends on which context it's used in.
my big fat mama
You take the word, and put it in a gramatically correct sentence. :) *HEY NATALIE ;) FROM: BANANA*
I don't see why not although beginning a sentence with 'or' is unusual.
No. That phrase doesn't have a verb.
Yes. "She has no idea that you are even here." is a correctly formed, gramatically correct sentence.