The noun "Sunday's" is incorrect. The apostrophe s ('s) at the end of the word forms a singular possessive noun.
The correct plural noun is Sundays.
"All job candidates are asked whether they can work on Sundays."
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
Yes it is. The sentence "This will be an exciting month for me" is absolutely correct (it needs a period at the end, of course). But "a correct grammar" is not-- you want to ask whether it is "grammatically correct," or to be simpler, ask whether it is "good English."
Both are correct, but it depends on whether this phrase is the subject of the sentence or the object: grandmother and I went to the park. They bought lunch for grandmother and me.
The sentence "Whether he was duplicitous regarding his character is open to question" is grammatically correct and complete.
well, the sentence would be more correct if you did:Not only did she sing beautifully, but she also danced beautifully.ORNot only did she sing beautifully, but she danced beautifully as well.
The correct spelling is "whether." It is used to introduce choices or possibilities in a sentence.
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
Yes it is. The sentence "This will be an exciting month for me" is absolutely correct (it needs a period at the end, of course). But "a correct grammar" is not-- you want to ask whether it is "grammatically correct," or to be simpler, ask whether it is "good English."
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
The effect is to make the reader question whether the apostrophe was correct. "It's cold today so I will wear a jumper" or "It's a boy!" are correct.
Yes, but whether it means anything is unclear. A sentence may be grammatically correct and total gibberish at the same time.
Both are correct, but it depends on whether this phrase is the subject of the sentence or the object: grandmother and I went to the park. They bought lunch for grandmother and me.
What comes before pre-employment are conditions when job candidates will be subjected to background checks whether candidates have criminal records, drug testing whether candidates use hard drugs or on medication, screening tests to find out about the work morale of the candidates.
Impossible to determine whether it is dangling without the rest of the sentence.
The sentence "Whether he was duplicitous regarding his character is open to question" is grammatically correct and complete.
It is NOT correct; it should be: He has neither had his breakfast nor IS HE coming out of his room (the inversion is used here for emphasis and effect).
well, the sentence would be more correct if you did:Not only did she sing beautifully, but she also danced beautifully.ORNot only did she sing beautifully, but she danced beautifully as well.