The correct verb in the sentence is 'has written'. The word 'written' is the main verb; the word 'has' is the auxiliary verb.
No. It is unclear in this sentence who sent a letter to who. Maybe it should be: Thanks for confirming the receipt of my letter.
Did you write a letter to your grandmother? He learned to write his name in kindergarten.
If speaking about a grandmother and great-grandmother, yes, lower case. But when writing to your grandmother, it would be upper case. Also, if either is the first word of a sentence it is first-letter uppercase.
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
No. It is correct to say, "He received the letter two days ago."
the correct sentence is i will transcend this letter
No. It is unclear in this sentence who sent a letter to who. Maybe it should be: Thanks for confirming the receipt of my letter.
"Who sells it?" is correct (always capitalize the first letter of a sentence).
Did you write a letter to your grandmother? He learned to write his name in kindergarten.
If speaking about a grandmother and great-grandmother, yes, lower case. But when writing to your grandmother, it would be upper case. Also, if either is the first word of a sentence it is first-letter uppercase.
With the exception of capitalizing the first letter of the sentence and a period at the end, the sentence is correct.
The sculpture was free-form. This is a correct sentence if you capitalize first letter.
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "Please note that this letter is merely an inquiry regarding your interest and availability."
He's bit the apple. This is a correct sentence (don't forget to start a sentence with a capitol letter).
"It is dark in the night." is a correct sentence if you remember to capitalize the first letter of the sentence and put a period at the end.
No. It is correct to say, "He received the letter two days ago."
No, because it's not started off with a capital letter and there's no end punctuation. It would be a sentence if it was written like this: "She will have completed the homework by Tuesday."