yes, it looks good to me.
Both are used; it all depends on whether your sentence refers to the singular or the plural.Singular:Jack has become a well-known baseball player.Plural:Jack and Jill have become famous for their homemade olives.
Yes.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct.
The clause / sentence has no meaning out of context. If it is a response, the somewhat archaic but correct construction is "I am fine, as I hope you are as well." You would not use the words "too" and "as well" in the same clause as that is redundant.
I believe my offices and I are well known.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.The pronoun 'I' is the subject of the relative clause 'who I am'.
Both are used; it all depends on whether your sentence refers to the singular or the plural.Singular:Jack has become a well-known baseball player.Plural:Jack and Jill have become famous for their homemade olives.
If I understand your sentence it should read: Both he and I are well. Or: I am well and he is well, however that does not read as easily as the first example.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
Yes.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct.
The difference between good and well is that well is and adverb so it describes an verb or action word. And good is an adjective so t describes nouns: person place or thing. Ex: George is good at writing, that sentence is wrong because the word good is describing how he writes, and writing is a verb, so you would have to use the adverb well, George was well at writing. Ex: These are good meatballs. This sentence is correct, the word good is describing the meatballs which is a noun so the word good which is an adjective would be the correct use in that sentence. I hope I helped! :)
It certainly can be: Well phrased ideas are appealing.
'Tom hopes to do really well on this exam' is a correct sentence. Currently, the sentence is in the future and present tense. To change it to past, change 'hopes' to 'hoped'.
The clause / sentence has no meaning out of context. If it is a response, the somewhat archaic but correct construction is "I am fine, as I hope you are as well." You would not use the words "too" and "as well" in the same clause as that is redundant.
The first letter of a sentence must be capitalized as well as the name of a city. If you capitalize the starting 'k' and put a period after 'city', it is a correct sentence.
The sentence 'A school housed in the church is doing well,' is grammatically correct.