It should be--- He is at any rate, supposed to speak to them.
Am busy
Frederick, a West Point cadet, will speak to the students.
"Did you have a chance to speak with him?" is a perfectly good and correct sentence. It does not contain any grammar mistakes.
No ! In America we speak broken English according to the the people in England.
Yes, the modifier is used correctly. "He spoke sharply to his sister" would be the correct way to write the sentence.
You report on something. You write a report about something, or on something.
Frederick, a West Point cadet, will speak to the students.
The correct sentence is: He is reluctant to speak in public.
No, the correct sentence should be: "The beneficiary is unable to speak due to her disabilities." "Due to" is the correct phrase to use in this context.
"Did you have a chance to speak with him?" is a perfectly good and correct sentence. It does not contain any grammar mistakes.
No ! In America we speak broken English according to the the people in England.
This is not a correct sentence. It might be used by someone that learned to speak in the inner city, but is not correct.
No, The correct form would be "I want to make him speak English". The word "to"is a preposition so therefore must take a noun as its object. The work "speak" is a verb in this sentence so therefore "to speak" would be incorrect. Get rid of the"to"before the word speak. (This is only for this sentence. There are other instances where "to speak" is correct.)
Given that 'she speaks' fits with the rest of the sentence, yes. It is a correct form of the verb to speak.
The sentence should be: "The words of the puppeteers must be spoken clearly for all to hear." "Speak" should be changed to "spoken" to make the sentence grammatically correct.
No: Because your "efforts" are plural, so also should be your "volumes".
were you able to input my time card data?
both are correct.