No.
"Your presence is always there and love" is not a correct sentence. You might write "you and your love are always here for me."
"Give me your hand," she said. This is dialogue and must use quotes.
There are different ways to write this sentence. The best way to write it would be "What were you doing before this"?
A complete sentence needs a subject and a verb, and it must express a complete thought or idea. Punctuation at the end, such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point, is also necessary for a sentence to be considered complete.
Sure, please provide me with the sentence and the homophones to choose from.
That question makes no sense. Please write your question in a complete sentence.
Begin with a capital letter and end with a punctuation mark. Include at least one subject and one verb. That is how to write a complete sentence. I don't know definition of a "correct" sentence.
The "Y" in you should not be capitalized and while it takes only a noun and a verb to make a sentence - which "I write you" has - it isn't a correct sentence because the tense of the verb is incorrect. "I will write you" would be a correct sentence with the correct verb tense. You could begin a sentence, albeit it sounds a bit odd, with the words "I write you" as in "I write you this letter today in an attempt to appeal to your empathetic side", however "I write you" is not a correct sentence alone.
You can't write a sentence that is not a sentence, it is either a sentence or it is not. You can write a sentence that doesn't look like a sentence. For example, "Stop!"; although one word, it is a complete sentence. The subject 'you' is implied, the verb is 'stop', which makes it a complete sentence.
first we will see the answer then we are write correct answer
"Your presence is always there and love" is not a correct sentence. You might write "you and your love are always here for me."
You report on something. You write a report about something, or on something.
The complete meal had only 750 calories.
"Give me your hand," she said. This is dialogue and must use quotes.
Yes, nice sentence
Complete sentences are a sentence with a complete thought, statement, etc. Ex: He says he will help me on my homework. (this is a complete sentence) An incomplete sentence would be: He says he. (you did not complete the thought.)
No,it is not grammatically correct.