A semicolon.
"The manager will be out of town; he won't be back until Monday."
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Yes, it is.
No article is needed in that sentence.
The sentence contains three errors:The first person pronoun 'I' is always capitalized.The noun 'Monday' is a proper noun, the name of a specific day. A proper noun is always capitalized.The preposition 'to' expresses a motion or direction of its object (you). There is no function for motion or direction in this request.The correct sentence is: 'Can I meet you on Monday?'Or, an appropriate preposition that can be added is 'with'; for example: 'Can I meet with you on Monday?'
(Monday is a proper noun and cannot actually be an adjective, but it can be a noun adjunct as in these sentences)My best friend was wearing her Monday shirt.The Monday morning paper always has the supermarket section.
The sentence is not grammatically correct. A clearer version could be: "In the suburbs, the bus only runs Monday to Friday." This revision improves clarity by rearranging the words and adding necessary punctuation.
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Yes, it is.
Mr.john cena
The nouns are Mr. Gates, coach, team, Monday. There are no pronouns in your sentence.
The sentence probably should read: On Monday, December 21, 1986, we met in St. Paul, Minn. (APA style) Abbreviations other than for Minnesota would normally not be used, because they add periods within the sentence, but they would make this: On Mon. Dec. 21, 1986, we met in St. Paul, Minn. In other styles, the postal abbreviation can be used On Monday, December 21, 1986, we met in St. Paul, MN. (period is sentence end)
I can Declare that my friend birthday Antaw is Monday.
Yes
The General Manager position is currently run anonymously.
Yes
No article is needed in that sentence.
im recalibrating the meeting to monday.