The correct order of the sentence a small serving Japanese bowl is a small Japanese serving bowl. The reason for this is that serving describes the type of bowl and Japanese describes the type of serving bowl. serving does not describe a Japanese bowl.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
It is grammatically correct, but the word order is unusual, suggesting a Yiddish influence.
"What if your order has been shipped" is not a sentence."If your order has been shipped" is a subordinate clause, so the original phrase has no predicate. You have to complete the sentence. For example:What should I do if your order has been shipped?What will happen if your order has been shipped?What is the problem if your order has been shipped?In ordinary conversation, a native English speaker will probably understand what you mean by "What if your order has been shipped" from the context in which it is said. But it is not a real sentence.
"Go!" is the shortest complete sentence, since an imperative (an order, such as "Go!" ) can stand alone in English without a subject. In this kind of sentence, the pronoun "you" is the implied subject.
Yes, it is grammatically correct because both she and i are subject pronouns. However, it is customary to say "You and she are good friends" rather than "She and you." In general, the order is (you) (he/she/they/it) (I/we).
The correct order of the sentence a small serving Japanese bowl is a small Japanese serving bowl. The reason for this is that serving describes the type of bowl and Japanese describes the type of serving bowl. serving does not describe a Japanese bowl.
no.
Both are grammatically correct, but the normal word-order is "you are correct." The inverted word-order of "correct you are" is used for an emphatic, ironic or humorous effect.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
No. r is spelled are and the word order should be: When are you coming?
A simple sentence.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
Please provide the sentences in question in order to obtain the best answer possible. Many sentences are correct.
Yoko Ueda has written: 'Japanese corporate wives in Canada: serving the corporate order'
The correct way to write the sentence is, He works hard in order to earn money. The word "that" should be left out of the sentence entirely.
If you are not subject to a Home Office Deportation Order they can stay.
It would be Dr's order, but I would spell out the word. "Doctor's order".