The only question here would be about forming the possessive. All English nouns form the possessive singular by adding '-s: Jess's place. All English plurals ending in -s form the possessive by adding the apostrophe alone: The Joneses' house.
"Few days to go June will be ended soon" is not correct grammar. The correct grammar is "June will end in a few days to come." or "A few days to go until June ends."
"He tours the house" is a grammatically proper sentence, but it would normally include an adverb of repetitious time, such as "frequently", at the end of the sentence as given. If the reference is to a single incident, it could be expressed more idiomatically in the present progressive tense as "He is touring the house."
Use "the position for which I applied." Never end a sentence with a preposition.
This is a specific case of the misconception that sentences should not end with prepositions, or even more generally, the false prohibition on prepositional stranding. In short, yes, it isproper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition if everything else about the sentence is correct. Others disagree but they are wrong. Every modern grammar text agrees that there is nothing at all wrong with preposition stranding. What is wrong, according the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, is to rearrange a sentence, to a form that is difficult to read or understand, in an effort to avoid preposition stranding.For a more in-depth answer, including the other side of the argument, see "Is it proper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition?". However, much of the debate has been moved to the "Discussion" page.
No it is not proper to end a sentence with the word "from" as it's considererd a prepostition. For example, the proper way to ask the question, "Where do you come from" is "from where do you come." May sound a bit odd, but it's the correct way to ask the question. As a general rule, if you're ending a sentence with the word from, correct it by simply moving from the end of the sentence to the beginning.
Can you end my day with correct grammar
"Few days to go June will be ended soon" is not correct grammar. The correct grammar is "June will end in a few days to come." or "A few days to go until June ends."
No, that should be the financial year-end has passed.
Yes. For example, What did she point at ? However, do not use 'at' with 'where.'
"He tours the house" is a grammatically proper sentence, but it would normally include an adverb of repetitious time, such as "frequently", at the end of the sentence as given. If the reference is to a single incident, it could be expressed more idiomatically in the present progressive tense as "He is touring the house."
Yes it is. The sentence "This will be an exciting month for me" is absolutely correct (it needs a period at the end, of course). But "a correct grammar" is not-- you want to ask whether it is "grammatically correct," or to be simpler, ask whether it is "good English."
According to proper English grammar, no. "With" is a preposition. You aren't supposed to end a sentence with a preposition.
Use "the position for which I applied." Never end a sentence with a preposition.
This is a specific case of the misconception that sentences should not end with prepositions, or even more generally, the false prohibition on prepositional stranding. In short, yes, it isproper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition if everything else about the sentence is correct. Others disagree but they are wrong. Every modern grammar text agrees that there is nothing at all wrong with preposition stranding. What is wrong, according the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, is to rearrange a sentence, to a form that is difficult to read or understand, in an effort to avoid preposition stranding.For a more in-depth answer, including the other side of the argument, see "Is it proper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition?". However, much of the debate has been moved to the "Discussion" page.
No it is not proper to end a sentence with the word "from" as it's considererd a prepostition. For example, the proper way to ask the question, "Where do you come from" is "from where do you come." May sound a bit odd, but it's the correct way to ask the question. As a general rule, if you're ending a sentence with the word from, correct it by simply moving from the end of the sentence to the beginning.
Since Alexis already has a "s" on the end, it would be Alexis' mom.
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.