Yes, but it is still wrong. Grammatically correct is not the same as meaningful. Assuming you mean "yield for all time," use "give up for ever" instead of "...for never."
Yes, the sentence "I will give you a call" is grammatically correct. It means that in the future, the speaker intends to contact the listener by phone.
The grammatically correct way to phrase this too-vague question is, "Can you give me more sentences with the words, already?" Note the pluralization of "sentence" and the additional comma.
It is grammatically correct to say: There is nothing wrong with this machine.It is not grammatically correct to say: Will it is be grammatically correct to say ....The correct way to write that or say that would be: Would it be grammatically correct to say....
It is a correct sentence in all respects
"You took a test" is grammatically correct. "You gave a test" would mean that you were the one administering the test to someone else.
Either... I know you have it ! Just give it to me ! OR I know you have it, just give it to me !
It is grammatically correct. I do not agree, it does not make sense at all, revert what and confirm what ? It would be better to say.....Once you obtain the confirmation details, I will revert... It would depend on what the person was reverting to...another religion, another airline, the list is endless... this is a statement sentence and as such should give better detail .
"Give me your hand," she said. This is dialogue and must use quotes.
The sentence is a run on. Its hard, as an outside person, to decipher what you're saying. Since I can't figure out what you're trying to say I'm not sure how to fix it.
I was correct when I answered the mind-bending questions on the quiz.
Only if used in conversational syntax. It is not proper if you just have it be a sentence without the preceding sentence state a fact. For example, # first person says fact or conjecture. "The sky is blue." # Second person wants to know why. "Why?" The entire predicate spans across two sentences. as long as the subject (sky) and predicate verb (is blue) are present in the preceding sentence, than it is grammatically correct. But is frowned upon to use non conversationally unless using rhetoric. This is only to show hypocrisies or give a reason. Why? Because otherwise we would be causing disruption, not added voice, to the work.
Never say never again. I don't like to use "never" and "always" in the same sentence.