Yes, 'I hope that you were sincere when you gave me the advice.' is a correct sentence.
"Advice" is the noun, or it can be used as an object in the sentence. Advice cannot be used as a verb. Sally gave advice to all her friends. "May please advise" is also incorrect. Instead, it would be written, "Please advise."
Paul gave the flowers to Tom and me. Also, the first sentence makes no sense. Did you mean "the thirty fourth rule of grammar"?
She needs someone to counsel her on her educational future. (verb)Even a successful executive can occasionally use the wise counsel of his predecessors. (noun)
The source was not credible.The witness gave a credible account of the events.
"My lawyer advised me to plead not guilty." "Mary will plead with her father and hope that he gives her the money."
The error is the use of "I" instead of "me." The correct wording should be "He gave advice to my brother and me."
A noun is used in a sentence as the subject of a sentence or a cluase, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples: My advice is to save your money. The advice I gave him seemed to help. I gave him some advice. She didn't ask for my advice.
"Advice" is the noun, or it can be used as an object in the sentence. Advice cannot be used as a verb. Sally gave advice to all her friends. "May please advise" is also incorrect. Instead, it would be written, "Please advise."
The subject in the sentence "The insurance agent gave her sound advice" is "the insurance agent." This is the person performing the action of giving advice. The subject is typically who or what the sentence is about, and in this case, it identifies the role of the individual providing the advice.
The direct object is 'some advice'. That is the thing that you gave. The indirect object is 'her'. That is the person to whom you gave the thing. In this context it means 'to her', and indeed if you reversed the order of the direct and indirect objects that is what you would say: 'I gave some advice to her.'
I gave a sincere apology to my mother.
An anonymous internet user gave some advice to a fellow user who was in need of it.
The sage advice she gave me helped me make a wise decision.
Yes, very!
My teacher gave me the word inlegible, which I don't know how to use in a correct sentence.
In the sentence, Clara had gave or given the tape to Ana, the correct verb to be used is given. In this past perfect sentence the auxiliary verb hadalways takes another verb, given, in the past participle form.
The sapient man gave me great advice about my marriage because he had also had marriage problems