I would say it was. It could be phrased- With you I shall depart.
Either would be correct.
Honestly, this makes NO sense your right it doesn't, at least have correct grammar people.
Departure is a noun not a verb. "Depart" is a verb, and the future tense is will depart or shall depart.
'The plane shall depart in an hours time.' The apostrophe isn't needed. Nazx
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
The correct grammar is "had departed." This is because "departed" is the past participle form of the verb "depart," and when using the past perfect tense, we need to use the auxiliary verb "had" followed by the past participle form.
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.
The correct grammar is: "Are those correct?"
"On a train" is correct grammar.
The correct grammar for this sentence is: "When did you send it?"
No, the correct grammar would be "I hate you the way you hate me."
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
"July has just been started" is not correct grammar, instead the correct grammar is "July has just started."