No. It is correct to say, "He received the letter two days ago."
He a letter two days ago. Make negative sentence
Almost. "Underwent" is clumsy in the past tense, though fine in the present tense. This is more correct: "She underwent surgery on Tuesday. He saw her Thursday, and thought she looked pale, but he did not know she had undergone surgery only two days before. See what I mean?
two days is not enough.
Both are correct. Examples: # In a couple months, I will be 16. # A couple of moths later, he was the president of the company.
Rather is a degree adverb like quite. It is usually followed by a base form of an adjective. So here the correct version is "Yes, he is rather slend these days. "
two days' notice
The word 'costs' is spelt wrongly. The word 'to' is misused. Correct sentence is It costs too much to mail a letter these days.
the correct sentence is the house is under repair.
Yes.
After praying for many days, the rabbi received a litany from god.
yes....
I have a dream. (Noun) I dream of better days. (Verb)
It could be with an apostrophe: A prosperous day's ahead. (day's = day is) Otherwise it is not a sentence at all, as there is no predicate.
This is the year/month/day designation. The "o" is a zero, not the letter "o." So, 0y.0m.0d is zero years, zero months, and zero days. Now, this can mean that the convicted received no time, or the sentence has not been updated yet.
Back in the days before computers, the only way to check that a sentence was correct was to refer to a grammar textbook. Now, of course, a sentence can be run through your word processing program's grammar, or through a more thorough professional online grammar checker.
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Ibrahim takes a new book every two days, is the correct way to form this sentence. The verb is plural since it mentions more than one day.
You will receive a second notice after 5 days and then the letter is returned to sender 15 days from the date it was received at the post office and is marked unclaimed.