irregardless is not grammatically correct it is a double negative- the correct term is regardless
The grammatically incorrect sentence in the report may be due to a mistake made by the writer or editor, such as a typo, oversight, or lack of proofreading.
The correct phrasing is "my partner and I." Using "my partner and me" in a sentence as the subject would be grammatically incorrect.
Yes it is, but the proper term is "regardless".
The sentence is grammatically correct.
No, the sentence "You wake at 9 am" is grammatically incorrect. It should be written as "You wake up at 9 am."
It is grammatically incorrect to say sister and sister. You just say sisters.
"Off you go" is not grammatically incorrect.
Grammatically incorrect.
It has no main clause.
a-pples
The grammatically incorrect sentence in the report may be due to a mistake made by the writer or editor, such as a typo, oversight, or lack of proofreading.
The correct phrasing is "my partner and I." Using "my partner and me" in a sentence as the subject would be grammatically incorrect.
No, not usually, because normally it is grammatically incorrect.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
yes actually it is :)
Greek mythology. And your question is grammatically incorrect.
No. This is incorrect. We always say 'India has".