people who disobey traffic laws put others at risk
No. Depending on what the original idea was, the correct sentence would be: "The people try to help." "The person tries to help." "The people tried to help."
The correct way to start a sentence with a number is to spell it out... For example... 'Three people were injured' is correct while '3 people were injured' is not.
Some people are able to laugh at themselves, is graphically correct.
No ! In America we speak broken English according to the the people in England.
The present simple tense of the verb 'to be' is: Singular # I am ... # You are ... # He'she/it is ... Plural # We are ... # You are ... # They are ... 'You is' is not standard or correct English grammar, although in some dialects, and particularly within certain groups of people, this form is in common use.
An interrogative sentence definitely ends at a question mark. e. g. What have you done? Is it true that the people disobey their leaders? How many people lived in the city?
Yes
That's not even a complete sentence. The words TO, SAT, THIS, PEOPLE and IS can not be combined in any way to make a grammatically correct sentence. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Assuming the question should be Is it gramatically correct to say, "This people is..."? then it is not correct. One should say, "These people are...".
No. Depending on what the original idea was, the correct sentence would be: "The people try to help." "The person tries to help." "The people tried to help."
Correct
The correct way to start a sentence with a number is to spell it out... For example... 'Three people were injured' is correct while '3 people were injured' is not.
Yes. "I do not like people" is complete and correct, albeit anti-social.
Yes, it is correct. The restrictive dependent clause is "when people talk that way."
Some people are able to laugh at themselves, is graphically correct.
It is grammatically correct as a question.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct, but you really don't need the second "that."
Use "people who."