yes
"I have slain the dragon" is grammatically correct. "Slew" is the simple past tense form of "slay," while "slain" is the past participle form used with the auxiliary verb "have."
Actually it is slew. Slayed is a slang word and is not grammatically correct.
Yes. It has a subject = she it has a verb = slayed it has an object = dragon
This is not grammatically correct. The correct form is 'you do not know', or the abbreviated 'you don't know'.
Sure. It would also be grammatically correct to write He spoggled his nubbix on the goober. Grammatically correct and meaningful are not the same.
"I have slain the dragon" is grammatically correct. "Slew" is the simple past tense form of "slay," while "slain" is the past participle form used with the auxiliary verb "have."
Actually it is slew. Slayed is a slang word and is not grammatically correct.
Slew is the past tense version of Slay. I believe 'Get Slew' would mean to kill something, to slay it.(Though 'get slew' would not be grammatically correct.)Hope that helps.
No. It is: "The knight slayed the dragon".
Yes. It has a subject = she it has a verb = slayed it has an object = dragon
The brave knight slew the dragon.
The brave knight quickly slew the dragon.
"Not like that" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context.
Yes! That is grammatically correct!
Yes, 'for free', is grammatically correct.
This is not grammatically correct. The correct form is 'you do not know', or the abbreviated 'you don't know'.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.