The given sentence is incorrect because "information" in the meaning used in a conventionally plural form* in the sentence does not have any plural form**; therefore the "s" on the end of the word is incorrect.
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*The word "information" in criminal law has a specific technical meaning of a formal instrument charging someone with a crime. In this meaning, the word does have the plural form used in the sentence. However, if an actual plural were present, the modifier "some" should be changed to "many" or "a few"
**"Information" is part of a class of English word that can have variable magnitude but do not consist of commonly apparent individual units and therefore have no plural. Some common other words of this type are "news"; "money"; foods such as "butter", "coffee", and "tea", "love" (as a noun), and "happiness".
Technically neither one is incorrect. It is more grammatically correct to use this sentence; He felt he was being mistreated.
Yes. As long as the sentence is indeed a sentence (a subject and a verb) and not a fragment, then there is no reason why "both" cannot start a sentence.For example, there is nothing gramatically incorrect with the sentence: Both Amy and I waited in the rain for hours before the bus finally showed up.
It can be spelt like that but that would be generally incorrect.
How would you like me to put that in a sentence?
there is much angst in a sentence like this
Like telling someone.. "Is an invalid sentence." would be incorrect. "That is an invalid sentence." would be correct.
Technically neither one is incorrect. It is more grammatically correct to use this sentence; He felt he was being mistreated.
"Disregard what I just said, I'm tired and not thinking straight."
Yes. As long as the sentence is indeed a sentence (a subject and a verb) and not a fragment, then there is no reason why "both" cannot start a sentence.For example, there is nothing gramatically incorrect with the sentence: Both Amy and I waited in the rain for hours before the bus finally showed up.
This sentence is incorrect so incomprehensible... maybe the author of the sentence meant something like "Do you know the French words you're saying"
technical courses
3 incorrect sentences (for example)Here are some incorrect sentences:i want to go to the store. (the word "I" needs capitalization)I dont like to go swimming (1. No ' between dont 2. no period)Some People Want To Be President. (capitalization)There are many more incorrect sentences. (I suppose over 1,000,000 incorrect sentences.)An incorrect sentence is one where the punctuation is not correct. Examples above.Or where the grammar is not correct eg I am go to school every day. (Don't need 'be' verb am )Or where the spelling is not correct eg I don't like swiming. (swimming)Or where the word order is not correct eg I go always to the library. (always should come before go)etc etc etc etc.
The particles in this sentence are grammatically incorrect, rendering an accurate translation impossible.
Soon, college courses will offer cloning procedures practice.
That depends on what you are saying/asking. If you say something like "Later today, where will you be at?" or "Which restuarant is the salad bar at?" then that is correct. Saying "At 5:00 I will be at." is incorrect. When saying something like this, it's an incomplete sentence. In this example, you need to state where you will be at. This would be the correct way to finish the sentence: "At 5:00 I will be at the Matthew's house."
that informations is unknown. But hey a guy can dream
An incorrect promise is saying something like: I promise to never fail