"An" is only used before vowel's, "a" is used before consonant's. So, no. "A holiday."
Yes it is correct to say "Have a wonderful Holiday."
No. I'd say "during the holiday, I go shopping."
no, because you can only say "Have a Happy Holiday, or just "Happy Holidays."
no, because you can only say "Have a Happy Holiday, or just "Happy Holidays."
Yes, it is correct. Example: Your family and you were in Springfield over the holiday. I was in Boston when your family and you were in Springfield.
The correct spelling is holiday.
going for holiday next week
Both are correct.However, people in Europe and non-US countries talk about being "on holiday". US people more often say "During the holidays I went..."
Yes this is a correct sentence.
One could say "I would be on holiday to London" or "I would go on holiday to London" depending on what they are trying to express. The first one implies an explanation, for instance "Were I to go on the vacation, I would be on holiday to London" and the second implies where one would go, if one were to go on vacation.
holiday in hills it is not holidays on the hill because who will have holidays on the hills only in hills>>>>>:D
"holidays" is the plural of "holiday". Thus the correct verb is - ARE - "they are" not "it is".