the weekend's here
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
No, "Im" needs an apostrophe: *I'm getting bored here - is this correct?*
its Here is a picture of Jane and I.
They are both correct. Lists is a plural and list is a singular. So saying: "Here are the lists is saying you have plural lists. While saying: "Here is the list" is saying you have only one list.
The verb tense is the same in both examples. Both examples can be used correctly."Where were you?" is a complete sentence."Where you were" is not complete on its own. "Is that where you were standing?"
Unless "the weekends" is a place you can go to, then no, it isn't correct. It is best to say "On the weekends" if you mean the days Saturday & Sunday.
The correct wording is: Night and weekend care are negotiable. To say it another way: Care on nights and weekends is negotiable.
It would be correct if you said 'your friends and I never study on the weekend" so just get rid of the s on 'weekends' then it is correct, unless you my friends and I which you would obviously change the 'your' to 'my' :)
No, the correct sentence should be "Your friends and you never study on the weekends." The verb "study" should be in the present tense to match the subject, "Your friends and you."
I know one photographer that I found here Fospace.co so this guy never gets weekends off. As a rule all photo sessions take place on weekends...
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
The correct form for this question is, "Did you leave your phone here?" If you are making a statement rather than asking a question, it is correct to say, "You left your phone here."
The more correct way to say this would be "It is humbling to be here". You can, as an alternative, say "I am humbled to be here."
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
"If only he were here" is grammatically correct. In this case, "were" is used as a subjunctive mood to express a hypothetical situation.
SANTA's HERE
If it's just those four words, then it should be "Who is here today?" If it's part of a longer statement, then either could be correct, depending on if it's plural or singular. "The boys who are here today" "The boy who is here today."