gah went to a wonderful,amazing park
A sentence with broken grammar is often referred to as a "grammatically incorrect" or "ungrammatical" sentence.
It is, but it is not conventional English syntax or grammar.
Chinese grammar/syntax is different from English grammar/syntax. Breaking up an English sentence like that and asking for its Chinese equivalent is not advisable as there may be none. Best to give the whole sentence.
You need to learn the rules of English grammar to be able to correct sentences.
It may be. There is no word in English that cannot begin or end a sentence. The idea that certain word are unfit to end a sentence comes from Latin grammar, not English.
According to proper English grammar, no. "With" is a preposition. You aren't supposed to end a sentence with a preposition.
A 2A sentence is a sentence that contains 2 adjectives separated by comma.
Rodney D. Huddleston has written: 'The Cambridge grammar of the English language' -- subject(s): English language, Grammar 'The sentence in written English' -- subject(s): English language, Generative grammar, Sentences, Syntax, Technical English, Written English 'An introduction to English transformational syntax' -- subject(s): English language, Generative grammar, Syntax
Yes, that is correct. But there should not be an article("a") before "correct".
This sentence has a ditransitive verb. You is Indirect object and , English Grammar is Direct Object . So there are two possible answers.1. By whom were you taught English grammar?2. By whom was English Grammar taught you?The previously given answer is wrong because a perfective verb is introduced unnecessarily and the verb is changed.Dr. Udayaravi Shastry
In English grammar, there are two types of voices: active voice and passive voice. Active voice is when the subject of the sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject of the sentence receives the action.
The words Yeolla Daebak are not translatable into English. It is not clear if it is correct grammar or not.