This would usually be correct, as in, "Several deaf people in the audience praised your signing during the lecture", or "Your signing a check is required for a bank where you have a checking account to honor the check when presented." "Signing" in these sentences is a special verb form called a "gerund", which functions in sentences as a noun and therefore can properly be modified with a possessive adjective such as "your". In another kind of sentence, however, "you" would be preferred to "your", for example, "You, signing that check, were a picture of extreme reluctance."
This sentence is not grammatically correct. For the sentence to be grammatically correct, the space between "in" and "to" would have to be removed. Therefore the sentence should read "They are into skating."
No. The grammatically correct sentence would read, "Did he get accepted into college?" or "Was he accepted into college?".
Certainly. The sentence has a subject, a verb, and an object modified by an adjective. It would still be correct grammatically if it ran " You drank an imaginary bus." Remember that "grammatically correct" and "meaningful" are not the same.
Although somewhat clumsy, it is correct yes (and ridiculously stiff, but if that's also the purpose of the sentence I won't argue). I would, however, recommend adding a noun at the end - presumably "document" or something else fitting, that clarifies and also lessens the abrupt stop of the sentence.
No. It would be better written: "He is a talented boy" or "The boy is talented."
This sentence is not grammatically correct. For the sentence to be grammatically correct, the space between "in" and "to" would have to be removed. Therefore the sentence should read "They are into skating."
Saying, "I am annoyed of the way you behave.", is grammatically correct.
The correct phrasing is "my partner and I." Using "my partner and me" in a sentence as the subject would be grammatically incorrect.
Yes, that sentence would be grammatically correct.
Short answer : Yes and not impolite at all, as suggested below. This is to be handled by you grammatically correct? requires inverted commas to be correct. It should be written as: "Is this sentence "This is to be handled by you." grammatically correct?" The sentence is correct but not very polite; it would be simpler to say "You are to handle this"
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
Yes, but it would not be grammatically correct.
"I said to him" is a grammatically correct sentence fragment since "said" is still waiting for its direct object. You said what to him? "I said "to him". would be a grammatically correct sentence.
Yes, I would say that sentence would be grammatically correct.
No. The grammatically correct sentence would read, "Did he get accepted into college?" or "Was he accepted into college?".
No. "Irresistibly" should be changed to "irresistible," then it would be grammatically correct.
Would it be a sentence or a phrase? If a sentence, no, it would be incorrect. If a phrase, yes, it would be correct. I like the phrase!