No, you must say I was in London yesterday.
Yes, the sentence "You came to school yesterday" is correct if addressing or describing an individual's attendance at school on the previous day.
Neither one sounds correct in basic English. Instead, one would probably say, "the lecture Jiff gave yesterday," or "yesterday's lecture, which was delivered by Jiff."
im pretty sure it's fed her yesterday You fed her yesterday would be the right way to say it in English because the verb to feed is irregular and it looses one vowel in the past tense. feed-fed feel-felt
Thanking someone for yesterday infers that someone actually gave you yesterday. It would be better to say, "Thank you for making yesterday special."
Yesterday = Ontem - The day before yesterday = Anteontem
No. You could say 'you could have come yesterday', or 'you would have come yesterday', or 'if you had come yesterday', though.
Absolutely not correct. You should say "Did you see him yesterday?"
No- Hope this helped!=) Another answer. I don' see anything wrong with saying, "It snowed yesterday." You could also say, "Yesterday, it snowed."
Yes, the sentence "You came to school yesterday" is correct if addressing or describing an individual's attendance at school on the previous day.
No this is incorrect grammar. To make the sentence grammatically correct you should say: One of my cousins came yesterday.
No, it makes complete nonsense reading "you had this......... "You should have had this yesterday!"
Neither one sounds correct in basic English. Instead, one would probably say, "the lecture Jiff gave yesterday," or "yesterday's lecture, which was delivered by Jiff."
im pretty sure it's fed her yesterday You fed her yesterday would be the right way to say it in English because the verb to feed is irregular and it looses one vowel in the past tense. feed-fed feel-felt
No, it looks like you did not use the correct verb. You probably meant to say that a bee stung you yesterday, and that (A bee stung me yesterday) would be correct. Although there is a slang usage for "skunk" as a verb, the past tense is "skunked". Also, since "to skunk" means "to defeat thoroughly", it would not make sense for a bee to skunk you.
It is grammatically correct to say: There is nothing wrong with this machine.It is not grammatically correct to say: Will it is be grammatically correct to say ....The correct way to write that or say that would be: Would it be grammatically correct to say....
The correct phrase is - "Are you in London?." Let's give an example. Deanie Etcetera of the Netherlands learns that her beloved, Mitch Longley, is in England visiting a friend. Deanie sends Mitch a text and says - "Hello Mitch, are you in London? We must meet."
Cheerio