It all depends on how you use it in a sentence.
Yes, that is correct.
"Did you have a chance to speak with him?" is a perfectly good and correct sentence. It does not contain any grammar mistakes.
If you can have converstaions with correct grammar and vocabulary in the language and if a lot of people know the language.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
AutoCorrect will make the spelling and capitalisation corrections that you have configured it to make. If you don't tell it what you want it to correct, it won't correct anything. But in any event, it can't correct your grammar, nor any misspellings that you haven't told it about.
You may say "I had no pencil," or you may say "I did not have any pencils" - whichever feels more natural to you. "Had no" would be used when speaking of a singular subject however.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct. However, it can be improved for clarity by rephrasing it as "Any information that you may have would be welcome." This version maintains the same meaning while sounding a bit more natural.
auto correct
The rules for correct speech and writing is named 'GRAMMAR'. The word 'Grammar' means 'Greek' teaching, from Classical Greece where language was first structured. Any school in the UK that describes itself as a 'Grammar School' should be teaching Classical Greek and Latin, known collectively as 'Classics'.
Yes, as the object of a verb or a preposition: I saw Bob; I saw her; I saw Bob and her. Some people think "her and Bob" sounds better, but it is not any more correct. There is nothing wrong grammatically with the construction 'Bob and her' as the object of a verb. Whether it sounds better or worse than 'her and Bob' is a question of usage or taste, not of grammar.
The tenses are not clear from the question, but any of the following would work. I would enjoy the hiking and the camaraderie. I enjoyed the hiking and the camaraderie. I enjoy the hiking and the camaraderie. I will enjoy the hiking and the camaraderie.