because it doesn't make any sense
It is not grammatically correct to say ' you go to home'. Instead you should leave out the word to, and say 'you, go home'.
to be home
We use past form of "go" 'cos it means "we should have gone home but we didn't.
"A few meters away from our home" is not a correct grammar but the correct one is "Few meters away from our home."
The correct phrase is "not yet home." In this construction, "yet" functions as an adverb indicating that the action of being home has not occurred up to the present moment. Placing "yet" after "home" would be redundant and disrupt the standard English syntax.
It is not grammatically correct to say ' you go to home'. Instead you should leave out the word to, and say 'you, go home'.
Sir, go home your drunk. You forgot how to english.
No! "I am in the house" "I am at home" "I am home" "I am in the home of ___" are correct.
go homego to your homego to your placego backgo swimminggo shoppinggo jogginggo to schoolgo to hospitalThese are all correct.
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
By the time you arrive, we will be preparing to go home.
I shall (or I will) go to the theatre (or a cinema!!!!) and watch a film and then I'll come home (or I'll be coming home).
I can only guess at what you are trying to say, but I guess that this sentence should have been, understand it in your own home. You don't have to go to school to learn about this; you can understand it in your own home.
Yes, "I am in your home" is grammatically correct. It is a simple sentence stating that the speaker is currently inside the home of the person they are talking to.
to be home
We use past form of "go" 'cos it means "we should have gone home but we didn't.
The correct sentence is 'I will come home at 3pm'.