Speaking as an editor, I would recommend this phrasing: We build on experience and integrity. However, if you want to keep the same word order, then the sentence should be Experience and integrity are what we build on. You need to use the plural since experience and integrity are two things, not one thing.
To it is not. The correct term is "how are you?""Which of the following statements is most correct?" is an interrogative sentence, a sentence that asks a question.The interrogative pronoun 'which' indicates that there are two or more choices from which to select a statement.
The following are your resumé and covering letter is a correct sentence.
carlos has did his work correct
Yes, it is.
They're
Yes. "Artistic integrity personifies ______." would be a grammatically correct sentence.
No - the sentence 'Had never been experience' is not a correct sentence.
A correct way to ask this question is, "What were you doing before?"
No
"1.6 years of experience" is not a sentence at all, because it does not contain a verb. "1.6 years of experience" is an example of a "sentence fragment".
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
This can fall under two different forms of sentence. One denoting a list, and one not. IE: Thomas is following Susanne. The following is a list of automobile parts you will need: So, this will largely depend on the kind of sentence you are forming and the information you are trying to get across to your audience.
The correct grammar is "Between you and me."
The correct sentence is: "Have you ever traveled before?"
To it is not. The correct term is "how are you?""Which of the following statements is most correct?" is an interrogative sentence, a sentence that asks a question.The interrogative pronoun 'which' indicates that there are two or more choices from which to select a statement.
The following are your resumé and covering letter is a correct sentence.