Visited her and me.
I would say " I look forward to meeting you." instead of just " Look forward to meeting you." But as far as I am concerned it is just fine and I can be a grammar snob!
well it is correct but the grammar is wrong instead say "are you good at swimming" they both mean the same but this sentence a correct pronunciation.No. We say we are good at something if we mean that we do it well. The sentence "You are good in swimming" might be correct, but only if "swimming" is the name of a course of study, just as we might say "You are good in French," meaning you get get high marks in French class.
Neither Julius nor the tourists want to wait for the rain to end before visiting the museum. Subjects joined by “or” or “nor” - two or more subjects, joined by “or” or “nor” require a verb that agrees with the subject closest to the verb.
I think that it is always correct.
Not a matter of grammar as such, icebreaker is an idiom meaning a way of getting strangers at a party or get-together to mingle happily, instead of keeping themselves apart from each other.
"July has just been started" is not correct grammar, instead the correct grammar is "July has just started."
No. Instead use It makes me itch.
This is he is correct, but we'll say that's me.
"She wished she had run away, instead of marrying him." or "She wished she had run off, instead of marrying him." or "Instead of marrying him, she wished she had run away."
"Its gonna be a good sleep for me tonight" is not correct grammar; instead, it should be "It's going to be a good sleep for me tonight".
An UM is correct. Use an instead of a when the following noun begins with a vowel sound.
"Would have run" is correct grammar. "Would of run" is a common error known as a homophonic mistake, where "of" is mistakenly used instead of "have."
It sounds odd to me. I would suggest, upon checking, instead.
That is not correct grammar. A better sentence would be "I went to the supermarket and found this item." In the proper sentence, there is an object and better structure.
The correct grammar for the sentence "The sun shone behind the stars" is to use the past tense of the verb "shine" as "shone" instead of "shined."
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "It's going to be good for me tonight." In this corrected sentence, "It's" is the contraction for "It is," and the word "good" should be used instead of "a good."
the correct grammar is: please respond to Mike and I. you do not need the word back as respond means" get back to"