No. There is one word wrong. The sentence should be:
I thought of you when I saw it.
The sentence 'Correct the sentence.' is a correct sentence. The subject is implied 'you'; the verb is 'correct'; the direct object is 'sentence'; and it is a complete thought. These are all the elements required for a complete sentence.
Is this correct? Thought you was going to go to Belks tomorrow.
A frequently used and very inccorect usage of the word seen is in its past tense form; Wrong I seen that movie. Correct I saw that movie or I have seen that movie.
no it is not a correct sentence.
Only in one context, which is seen in the question: you used "the" as a noun exemplar of "the word" and the object of analysis, and not as a grammatical component of the sentence. When used as an article, "the" cannot appear at the end of a sentence.
No, a grammatically correct sentence would be: "You thought the hesitant man was the burglar."
No. It will only BRING is correct but this is not a complete sentence. It will only bring what? You need to complete the thought.
A pride of lion was seen nearby.
Yes, 'thought' is the irregular past tense of 'think'.
Yes, the sentence 'Where are you?' is a correct sentence. The three words are a complete thought with a subject, the pronoun 'where', and a verb, 'is'.
The sentence 'Correct the sentence.' is a correct sentence. The subject is implied 'you'; the verb is 'correct'; the direct object is 'sentence'; and it is a complete thought. These are all the elements required for a complete sentence.
No, the term 'clicked at home' is a sentence fragment. it requires a subject to be a sentence representing a complete thought.
Subject, verb, punctuation, capittalization, complete thought.
Is this correct? Thought you was going to go to Belks tomorrow.
No, I think the correct way is- Is this the first time you've seen it?
The word "seen" is used as the past participle of "see" to indicate that the action was witnessed or observed. It is appropriate to use "seen" in a sentence when describing something that has been observed in the past or when forming a passive construction.
Yes, it's the correct use of the word 'wise' but the sentence needs a comma after the initial phrase: As far as you have seen, your seniors are so wise.