we have participated to the houston trade mission
If you mean: Is the sentence "Is this grammar right?" grammatically correct (or right), then yes, it is.
No. It should be "Is the grammar right in this sentence?"
This English verb tense is called Past Perfect. It is formed by combining the simple past tense of 'to have' ('had') with the past participle of the main verb ('participated').Past Perfect tense is used in very specific situations. When two different actions, events, or situations are in the past, we can show that one happened before the other by using Past Perfect tense with the earlier of the two. Usually, these two actions, events, or situations are related to each other in some way. Consider the following:I discovered that I had forgotten my keys.Here, there are two past events: (1) I discovered, and (2) I forgot my keys. We use Past Perfect with the earlier of the two events to show that it came first and is linked to the other event.So, your sentence could be correct in the right context (i.e., with another past action, event, or situation that comes after it and is somehow related to it). For example:I didn't know that you had participated in the debate.
Yes, 'you were correct' is perfect grammar. An example sentence: You were correct when you said that a tomato is a fruit.
Yes, this sentence is correct grammar.
NO: "were participating". And it's "grammar" and "correct", not "right". And "A total of 59 customers..." And "regions".
I participated in the exercise
If you mean: Is the sentence "Is this grammar right?" grammatically correct (or right), then yes, it is.
cheque of is a right grammar!
No. It should be "Is the grammar right in this sentence?"
A. The correct spelling is grammar.
I am studying my grammar lessons right now.
Use Correct Grammar
Yes, "The house is not as cheap as he thought" is proper grammar.
The grammar is said to be operator precedence grammar, if its right hand side of its production should not have the Empty production or two non-terminal should not be adjacent to each other, then we call it as operator precedence grammar The grammar is said to be operator precedence grammar, if its right hand side of its production should not have the Empty production or two non-terminal should not be adjacent to each other, then we call it as operator precedence grammar
To convert a right linear grammar to a nondeterministic finite automaton (NFA), you can create states in the NFA corresponding to the variables and terminals in the grammar. Then, for each production rule in the grammar, you can create transitions in the NFA based on the right-hand side of the rule. This process allows you to represent the grammar as an NFA that can recognize the same language.
I will respect you if you are honest with me is the right grammar of the sentence.