It is grammatically correct.
I do not agree, it does not make sense at all, revert what and confirm what ?
It would be better to say.....Once you obtain the confirmation details, I will revert...
It would depend on what the person was reverting to...another religion, another airline, the list is endless... this is a statement sentence and as such should give better detail .
Is this a correct sentence? To prove it once agin and to bliss you we now have a special offer
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
Once a year is correct.
It depends on the sentence to say whether it its grammatically correct. If someone were to say, for example, "I have no money." Yes, it would be correct. If someone were to say "No, I don't have no money." It would be incorrect because it is a double negative. A double negative is when in one sentence you would use the word "no", or a conjunction with no, as in "don't" or "won't" more than once without a proper comma in place. To correct the example sentence, one might say "No, i don't have any money." or "No, I haven't any money."
That is the correct spelling of "once in a lifetime."
"You once met the prime minister." is a correct sentence.
Once you book a flight, you need to check your e-mail for a confirmation, telling you we received your information.
No. The more natural phrasing is "It will never be like it once was."
Is this a correct sentence? To prove it once agin and to bliss you we now have a special offer
No. This is a clause that cannot stand on its own. It is not a complete sentence. A sentence needs a subject and a verb.
The answer to this question is very simple. The answer is once, you may only receive Confirmation once.
Yes, the sentence is correct grammatically. However, it could be improved by adding a comma after "Canada" for better clarity: "When he lived in Canada, he went to the cinema once a week."
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
No, the grammar in that sentence is not correct. It should be: "Once we get inside, David said, 'You can take your boots off.'"
yes and no. yes- it's correct. no- i dont ;P
this sentence makes perfect sense
It would be better to say "Payment should be made once"