The verb tell does not take the preposition to. Omit the word to and the sentence would be okay.
No, it is not correct.You should have an article - a or the - before "teacher."
You should really work hard on the report that your teacher has assigned you!
Well, honey, that sentence is as confused as a chameleon in a bag of Skittles. It should be "Either the teacher or the students are to blame for the fire" to match subject-verb agreement. So, in short, no, it ain't grammatically correct.
Hm.... "The teacher moved all of the student's desk." Actually, no. It should be phrased like this: "The teacher moved the student's desks."
Sure... "My friends and me can pretend to be whatever they want!"
No, it is not correct.You should have an article - a or the - before "teacher."
If she knew that you had plagiarised this sentence, your teacher should get into a right lather.
You should really work hard on the report that your teacher has assigned you!
No, the word "history" should not be capitalized when referring to a history teacher unless it is at the beginning of a sentence.
The sentence with quotations is as following: The teacher asked: "What kind of books do you like to read?"
You should be a teacher at blab school.
this is grammatically incorrect: 'does he a teacher' is stating that he 'does' a teacher. there is no such usage in correct English other than that of slang, and would imply a sexual connotation.
"What do you find in the middle of Paris", asked the geography teacher?
Well, honey, that sentence is as confused as a chameleon in a bag of Skittles. It should be "Either the teacher or the students are to blame for the fire" to match subject-verb agreement. So, in short, no, it ain't grammatically correct.
The appropriate pronoun is 'he'. In the sentence the pronoun he, takes the place of the noun 'teacher' as the subject complement following the linking verb 'will be'. A pronoun functioning as a subject complement (predicate nominative) is always a nominative (subjective) form.
The term social studies teacher does not need to be capitalized because it's not a proper noun. I would say social studies teacher, because there are only three times you use a capital letter 1. The beginning of a sentence. 2. When the thing is a name. 3. When the thing is a place.
I'd use He, Or She, depending on the gender of the teacher. Then I would say:He looked like her and Claire's creepy music teacher.