I think this is one of those things when it depends on the writer. If you are thinking of the team as a 'thing', you could use which. If you are thinking of the team as the individual players, I think you can use who.
"You and your team ARE" is correct.
Well, honey, the correct grammar is "my team and I." You always put yourself last when talking about a group because that's just good manners. So, it's "my team and I went to the party," not "me and my team went to the party." Keep it classy!
Team Member of Winning Team
The team of professionals are experienced.
A team of girls is ("of girls" is a modifier, a team is the subject and that is singular)
"You and your team ARE" is correct.
is the phrase Helen's team correct
his team.
The phrase "Is your team has correct grammar" contains a grammatical error. It should be rephrased as "Does your team have correct grammar?" This correction properly uses "does" to form a question about the team's grammatical skills.
Well, honey, the correct grammar is "my team and I." You always put yourself last when talking about a group because that's just good manners. So, it's "my team and I went to the party," not "me and my team went to the party." Keep it classy!
Team Member of Winning Team
The team of professionals are experienced.
The questions and issues the team are experiencing.
A team of girls is ("of girls" is a modifier, a team is the subject and that is singular)
yes that is the correct spelling
The correct phrasing would be "I am glad to be joining this team." The phrase "to joining" is incorrect; it should be "to be joining" to properly convey your excitement about joining the team.
Team management is his strength