Both, and here is what I mean:
1. "All the time in the world will not help me finish my homework."
2. "I am late turning in my homework all of the time." People say 'all the time' but it is lazy language and not 'proper'. Of course, you could bypass this form and say, "I am chronically late turning in my homework."
Another similar one is "I threw the banana peel out the window." To be proper English, it should be "I threw the banana peel out of the window", or ". . . through the window."
No, it is not proper English to say "on tomorrow." The correct phrase is "tomorrow."
It's not proper English, so spell check will say it's wrong, but people say "what're" all the time, as in "what're you doing today?"
Spelled and pronounced the same as English, as all proper names.
It is proper English to say thank you for your concern because that goes to show that you acknowledged the person you are talking to
No, it is not considered proper English to use "these ones." Instead, you should simply say "these" without the unnecessary "ones."
Yeah you can say that or you can also say I can believe
Yes.
No it is "went well".
What sentences
No but Jack Morgan can.
The same way you say it in English. It is a proper name.
That you need to speak proper English.