I love my dog. or I love my dog!
you need to capitalize the I and end with punctuation.
"Your presence is always there and love" is not a correct sentence. You might write "you and your love are always here for me."
This is not a sentence it is a phrase and as a phrase it is correct.
No, it is not correct. Here is the correct sentence: You and they love pancakes. Whenever in doubt which is the correct combination of pronouns, try the sentence with with each one individually: You love pancakes. They love pancakes. You and they love pancakes.
Both loves you and love you are grammatically correct. For example, "He loves you," or "We love you."
The sentence Let this promise remind you of his unfailing love is grammatically correct.
No, that sentence is not correct. That sentence should be: If you have been in love for 6 years.
When you find one dog that you fall in love with, that's your dog.
"The dog has its own collar" is grammatically correct. Many people mistakenly use "it's" in this kind of sentence, but that is the contraction for "it is," not the possessive form of "it."
Tom yelled, "Catch the Dog!"
Of Couuursee Not .
No, not even close. What exactly are you trying to ask?
Correct