Yes, that is correct.
It looks fine, but does not amount to much on its own! Here is a grammatically correct sentence including the words "will not be subject to": Late work will lose marks, but work handed in on time will not be subject to any penalty.
The present simple tense of the verb 'to be' is: Singular # I am ... # You are ... # He'she/it is ... Plural # We are ... # You are ... # They are ... 'You is' is not standard or correct English grammar, although in some dialects, and particularly within certain groups of people, this form is in common use.
Maybe. If the example you give is the entire sentence, then it is not correct: the verb should be plural to agree with the plural subject " two sons." But if the subject is "All that is left...." then the predicate "is two sons" is correct.
As long as you need it to be! There is no magic formula for telling how long your sentences should be.Write a correct English sentence with a subject and a predicate, give it correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation, and that is how long it is supposed to be!
Write the word or words that goes go in the sentence. The subject is "word," singular, so the verb must agree by also being singular.
It depends if the phrase is subject or the object of a sentence. if it is a subject, the correct term is "she and you," as in "She and you went to the park" if it is an object, the correct term is "her and you," as in "The milk tasted sour to her and you"
It is not actually a sentence. It is a complete subject with no predicate. A sentence would be "This is an example of what love is supposed to be."
The pronoun "I" is the correct choice when referring to oneself as the subject of a sentence. "Joe and I went to the store" is the proper usage.
No. Sounding like something from a circus marquee, it has no subject and no verb.
Yes, "Please submit the report to Johanna or myself" is correct grammar. The use of "myself" as a reflexive pronoun in this sentence is appropriate because it refers back to the subject, "I."
It looks fine, but does not amount to much on its own! Here is a grammatically correct sentence including the words "will not be subject to": Late work will lose marks, but work handed in on time will not be subject to any penalty.
The present simple tense of the verb 'to be' is: Singular # I am ... # You are ... # He'she/it is ... Plural # We are ... # You are ... # They are ... 'You is' is not standard or correct English grammar, although in some dialects, and particularly within certain groups of people, this form is in common use.
Yes it is correct.
IT- Subject Tugs- Verb, or predicate at, my, heart- Adjectives Strings- direct object, or noun
Who is correct. it refers to the subject of the sentence who is a person
Yes, it is correct grammar to say "Let Brittany or you know" if you are addressing both Brittany and another person in terms of who should be informed. It is a common way to phrase a message where either Brittany or the other person should be informed.
The phrase "you and me" is not grammatically correct in traditional grammar. When referring to the subject of a sentence, it should be "you and I." However, in informal speech or certain contexts, "you and me" is commonly used.