Our family visited Lincoln Park, and I bought an animal postcard.
The compound sentence "I went to the store, and then I visited my friend" contains correct punctuation.
Are this correct sentences? "Though she had only recently visited there, he could not remember it. They were surprised and everyone understood. They were difficult, but she welcomed his conversations despite everything."
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "My family visited Washington, D.C., and spent three days exploring the Smithsonian." This includes adding a comma after "Washington" and using periods in "D.C." to indicate it is an abbreviation. Additionally, the sentence begins with a capital letter.
Nah your wrong!It is "I had visited you when you called me".That is a grammatically acceptable sentence. It would require a certain type of context for it to make sense. For example, let us say, you phoned me up to complain that I never visit you. But I protest, I had visited when you called me. More likely I would put it, I had already visited you when you called me to complain that I wasn't visiting you. That would be much clearer.
The sentence "I went to a friend's house" is correct, meaning you traveled there. Another synonym is that you "visited" your friend.
The sentence with the correct verb tense is "We went to a show and visited the flea market." Both verbs are in the past tense, ensuring consistency in the sentence. The other sentences contain tense errors that disrupt their grammatical structure.
'visited you' actually sounds incoreect.Instead you can say 'i visited at your place' or 'i had a visit at your house'!
Have you ever visited Gettysburg Pennsylvania. Were does the commas go.
Last year, we visited the Grand Canyon.
The past tense of "to visit" is "visited."
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln Memorial honors Abraham Lincoln, and can be visited in Washington DC.