their
No. The past participle is sung."The girls have sung at this concert before."
The correct sentence is: The girls who I am friends with.The relative pronoun 'who' is a subject pronoun, functioning as the subject of the relative clause.To use the object pronoun 'whom', you must place the preposition 'with' before the pronoun, 'The girls with whom I am friends.', making the pronoun 'whom' the object of the preposition 'with'.
As tall as she. In a sentence, you use 'I am as tall as she'. After the 'she', there is actually an 'is'. However, it is redundant so you do not add it into a sentence. So the sentence 'I am as tall as she' is actually 'I am as tall as she is', but only without the 'is'.
correct way tp spell a girls name of unis?
A team of girls is ("of girls" is a modifier, a team is the subject and that is singular)
A+ her
No girls is a plural noun. Try putting the word in a sentence to see if it is a verb. For example you can say -- She hit me. So try making the same sentence with girls -- She girls me. Hopefully you can see that this is not a correct sentence.
No. The past participle is sung."The girls have sung at this concert before."
No, the verb is incorrect. The subject is 'one', a singular form. The correct sentence is, "Not one of the girls was late." "Of the girls" is a prepositional phrase. The actual sentence is "One was late." However, in modern American usage, the use of the term girls to clarify the indefinite pronoun one makes the term "one" to be taken as plural. That and the poetry of the sentence overrides the traditional grammar. So, in modern American English, it is acceptable to say, "Not one of the girls were late."
yes, correct. Great job!
No, the correct word is "have".The three girls might have broken the records.
The correct sentence is: The girls who I am friends with.The relative pronoun 'who' is a subject pronoun, functioning as the subject of the relative clause.To use the object pronoun 'whom', you must place the preposition 'with' before the pronoun, 'The girls with whom I am friends.', making the pronoun 'whom' the object of the preposition 'with'.
the aposterphe goes after the Sfor example: The two girls' bicyles were stolen.
'You and your girls' is not a sentence because it has no verb. It can be a sentence by adding one:You and your girls win.
"Girls have sandwiches" is a perfectly valid sentence.
The nouns in the sentence are girls and bushes.
Yes, it is correct usage to say 'those girls'. It means specific girls as opposed to any girls or it means specific girls that have previously been mentioned. It is also used when gesturing toward the subject girls when you say 'those girls' but don't point, it's rude. Example of each: Those girls on the committee succeeded in achieving their goal raising funds. My sisters are on a trip of a lifetime to France. Those girls saved up for a long time for the trip.