Nope.
One of something... the something should be plural - friends.
Nope.
It lacks a subject. There is a verb/predicate - Is (Which, by the way, should not be capitalized.). There is a predicate nominative - one. There is an adjectival prepositional phrase that modifies "one" - of your friend(s). But there is no subject, e.g., a third person pronoun (he, she, it) or a proper personal name (Tom, Ed, Mary). Lacking a subject, there is no sentence.
The correct grammar for this sentence is: When did your friend come?
The correct sentence is: Me and my best friend are going on a exctotic trip to hawaii
thats absolutely correct!!!
well the correct way is whom but everyone says who.
You are looking for your best friend.
No.You probably mean one of the following:She can confide in her friend. This means she can tell her friend a secret.She can confine her friend. This means she can lock her friend up.
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The compound sentence "I went to the store, and then I visited my friend" contains correct punctuation.
You and your friend applied at....
Yes, it is correct, but rather literary, not to say old-fashioned in today's idiomatic English. In normal speech, the phrase is "You want him to be your friend" or "you want to be friends with him."
I would have loved to meet your friend.
The sentence "I went to a friend's house" is correct, meaning you traveled there. Another synonym is that you "visited" your friend.