yes,it is incorrect to start a sentence with ''and'' as it is a word to combine wo sentences together, not start a sentence
The correct phrase is "It will begin." The word "will" is a modal verb that requires the base form of the main verb, which in this case is "begin." "Will began" is incorrect because "began" is the past tense form of the verb.
I am ready to begin researching my family's genealogy.
This sentence is incorrect so incomprehensible... maybe the author of the sentence meant something like "Do you know the French words you're saying"
This is malformed German. "Well" is not a German word, and the word order is incorrect. The sentence makes no sense as it is.
The past tense of begin is began (simple past) or had begun (past perfect).Are you going to begin doing your homework?I began my homework ten minutes ago.I already have begun.Whilst the past tense of begin is indeed 'began', it is incorrect grammar to say "I have already began". In this sense, you would need to use the present perfect tense, which is "I have already begun".The correct way to use the past tense of 'begin' (i.e. began) is to say, "I began my homework ten minutes ago."
It was incorrect It is incorrect That is incorrect That was incorrect
The incorrect word is "cats" It should be "cat's" Furthermore, "whiskers" should begin with a capital "W" Hence the sentence should be: My cat's name is Whiskers.
incorrect
Yes, it's still a conjunction, and it's grammatically incorrect to begin a sentence with a conjunction. Of course, people do it all the time, but if you're writing a formal paper, don't do it.
If your teacher said that it's inappropriate to begin a sentence with a conjunction such as "and" or "but", he's wrong. There is nothing wrong with it. A complete sentence is a complete sentence whether it begins with "and" or not. Remember never to use sentence fragments in formal writing, any sentence fragment is incorrect. "Over by the barstools" AND "And over by the barstools" are both incorrect. Just make sure not do start too many sentences with "and", or your writing might seem too choppy.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes. However, using "for to" in place of the preposition "to" is considered incorrect. In many cases, the sentence should not be separate from the preceding one, but should be a clause added to it.
Incorrect ! It supposed to be (the crowd is unhappy )
No, that's incorrect. The sentence is, "It is coffee."
Just use it. You are incorrect... **** The pupil, getting five incorrect answers out of twenty exam questions, was not very happy.
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence.
Yes, you can begin a sentence with the acronym "NASA."