More correctly it would be... Thank you for giving this matter your attention.
Only if punctuated: Thanks, God. If not directly addressing the Almighty, Thank God is the correct form.
The sentence "Thank you lord for the safe travel" is not grammatically correct. It should be "Thank you, Lord, for the safe travel." In this corrected version, "Lord" should be capitalized as it is a proper noun, and commas are used to set off the interjection "Lord" and the prepositional phrase "for the safe travel."
The correct phrase is "Thank you for your help." "Thank" is a verb, so it needs to be followed by an object, in this case "you." "Thanks" is a noun, so it can stand alone as a shortened form of "thank you." Therefore, the complete and grammatically correct phrase is "Thank you for your help."
"Thank you for being so patient." That is correct.
Yes, the sentence is correct. The subject 'I' is inferred. Thank is the verb. You is the object. 'Taking the time to facilitate the training session' noun clause, object of the preposition 'for'.
No, the sentence "Thank you John" is not grammatically correct. It should be written as "Thank you, John." Adding the comma after "thank you" separates the person's name as an interjection in the sentence.
Yes, it is.
No and there are spelling mistakes as well.
Only if punctuated: Thanks, God. If not directly addressing the Almighty, Thank God is the correct form.
It depends upon the context. If you are using them as the subject of a sentence or clause, this is correct. If you are using them as the object of a sentence, clause, or preposition, you would use "us". Examples: He and I walked to the store. Sally walked to the store with us. He and I said, "Thank you." Sally said, "Thank you," to us.
The grammatically correct response to "How are you?" is typically "I'm good, thank you," or "I'm doing well, thanks."
The sentence "Thank you lord for the safe travel" is not grammatically correct. It should be "Thank you, Lord, for the safe travel." In this corrected version, "Lord" should be capitalized as it is a proper noun, and commas are used to set off the interjection "Lord" and the prepositional phrase "for the safe travel."
The correct phrase is "Thank you for your help." "Thank" is a verb, so it needs to be followed by an object, in this case "you." "Thanks" is a noun, so it can stand alone as a shortened form of "thank you." Therefore, the complete and grammatically correct phrase is "Thank you for your help."
Yes, it is a complete, correct sentence.
"Thank you for being so patient." That is correct.
"Michael, I, and the girls thank you for the generous gift." ... that works grammatically. You could switch around the order if you wanted to: "The girls, Michael, and I all thank you..." (with or without "all") "I, Michael, and the girls thank you..." (with or without "all") any of those work grammatically.
Yes, the sentence is correct. The subject 'I' is inferred. Thank is the verb. You is the object. 'Taking the time to facilitate the training session' noun clause, object of the preposition 'for'.