The (or those) gloves have lain on the bureau all week.
The correct sentence is: Are you running in the race for life next week? are and running = verbs
i am too week to run
Example sentence - The orthodontist planned his vacation the week after he put braces on my teeth.
No article is needed in that sentence.
The subject is aunt because the rest of the sentence is about her.
The correct grammar for this sentence should be: "Do you know that these gloves have been lying on the bureau all week?" This change is needed because "lying" is the correct verb form to describe the action of the gloves being placed on the bureau.
You always capitalise days of the week in a sentence.
A death sentence can be on any day of the week.
Yes, you always capitalize a day of the week.
it can be expected this week because corrections are over
If they reported your account to the credit bureau, your score will decrease whether you paid it or not.
No, it's a noun. Incidentally, "end of the week" is not a sentence, it is a phrase.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be written as "Here is my work schedule for this week."
you, town, week
My favorite day of the week is Friday because it gives me a chance to relax after a busy week; however, the weak WiFi signal in my house sometimes makes it hard to stream movies on that day.
his and this are the pronouns in that sentence!
We hold our mid-week conference on Wednesday afternoons at two. When I walked into the room, Mary stopped what she was saying in mid-sentence.