Spell "friends" correctly and capitalize "Monday." The rest looks fine, assuming your friends really did have a good time.
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
The sentence contains three errors:The first person pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.The noun 'Monday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day. A proper noun is always capitalized.The preposition 'to' expresses a motion or direction of its object (you). There is no function for motion or direction in this request.The correct sentence is: 'Can I meet you on Monday?'Or, an appropriate preposition that can be added is 'with'; for example: 'Can I meet with you on Monday?'
Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct. 'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.' 'How will you know if you passed it?' 'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Neither is correct. The correct phrase is 'goes shopping' (no for no to) He goes shopping on a Monday.
yes it is correct. No it isn't. Any time on Monday, or Any time next Monday, or Any time on the Monday coming would be correct. And remember, okay is a slang word.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
The sentence contains three errors:The first person pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.The noun 'Monday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day. A proper noun is always capitalized.The preposition 'to' expresses a motion or direction of its object (you). There is no function for motion or direction in this request.The correct sentence is: 'Can I meet you on Monday?'Or, an appropriate preposition that can be added is 'with'; for example: 'Can I meet with you on Monday?'
My friends went to a Concert last monday on labor day
my friends went to a concert last monday on labor day
Yes, the sentence 'How will you know if you passed it?' is grammatically correct. 'I'm pretty sure I passed my English exam.' 'How will you know if you passed it?' 'I'll find out when I go back to school on Monday.'
monday
were you able to input my time card data?
Neither. Monday is a proper noun, so the correct phrase would be "Monday's practice schedule times."
The sentence is not grammatically correct. A clearer version could be: "In the suburbs, the bus only runs Monday to Friday." This revision improves clarity by rearranging the words and adding necessary punctuation.