presents in blessing only
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
well, the sentence would be more correct if you did:Not only did she sing beautifully, but she also danced beautifully.ORNot only did she sing beautifully, but she danced beautifully as well.
No, it should be little more only.
well it is correct but the grammar is wrong instead say "are you good at swimming" they both mean the same but this sentence a correct pronunciation.No. We say we are good at something if we mean that we do it well. The sentence "You are good in swimming" might be correct, but only if "swimming" is the name of a course of study, just as we might say "You are good in French," meaning you get get high marks in French class.
Only in one context, which is seen in the question: you used "the" as a noun exemplar of "the word" and the object of analysis, and not as a grammatical component of the sentence. When used as an article, "the" cannot appear at the end of a sentence.
No. It will only BRING is correct but this is not a complete sentence. It will only bring what? You need to complete the thought.
Only one sentence is correct. The correct sentence would be "He saw me going there".
The grammar is correct but there should be no capitals in the middle of the sentence. Only the first letter of a sentence or proper nouns and the pronoun 'I' are capitalized. There are no proper nouns in the sentence: "I water the plant." is correct.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
A simple sentence.
The correct sentence is " When you receive the invitation tonight only then will we go together. sounds and looks grammatically alright.
There is only one, means location. Their means belonging or connected to them, it is a possessive pronoun
well, the sentence would be more correct if you did:Not only did she sing beautifully, but she also danced beautifully.ORNot only did she sing beautifully, but she danced beautifully as well.
The "Y" in you should not be capitalized and while it takes only a noun and a verb to make a sentence - which "I write you" has - it isn't a correct sentence because the tense of the verb is incorrect. "I will write you" would be a correct sentence with the correct verb tense. You could begin a sentence, albeit it sounds a bit odd, with the words "I write you" as in "I write you this letter today in an attempt to appeal to your empathetic side", however "I write you" is not a correct sentence alone.
Santa exercised forbearance in allowing some of the only partly-good children to have presents.
No. There is no main verb, only a dependent clause. the grammar is totally wrong anurag
it would be that because who only relates to humans