"holidays" is the plural of "holiday". Thus the correct verb is - ARE - "they are" not "it is".
holidays are over
The correct punctuation for "The holidays, in my opinion, are depressing."
The correct phrase is "happy holidays" without an apostrophe. "Happy holidays" is a common greeting used to wish someone well during the holiday season.
The correct saying is "Happy Holidays", now you know
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."
this sentence would read, "Rewrite this sentence using correct capitalization holidays in November" hope that helps
Either is correct, but you would want to use the first in reference to a single holiday. "Have nice holidays" could be used when there are two holidays close together, like Christmas and New Years.
Saying "Happy Holidays" to someone is politically correct because not everyone celebrates the same holiday. Saying "Happy Holidays" will be less offending than telling someone "Merry Christmas" who does not celebrate Christmas.
yes,why not say go?
"Simply say "During the holidays the family went to the beach."
I went to my aunt's country house to spend theEaster holidays.