No. Use "whether" instead of "if."
"Regardless" is the correct term to use. "Irregardless" is considered nonstandard and is often criticized for being a double negative (combining "ir-" and "regardless").
"Regardless"
irregardless is not grammatically correct it is a double negative- the correct term is regardless
There is no such standard word as irregardless... it is simply "regardless". The nonstandard word irregardless is redundant. The prefix ir- means not. People intend irregardless to mean without regard for some information, or without taking certain information into consideration. But it would really mean "Not [ir-] without regard" [regardless].When used, the word irregardless carries the unfortunate sense that an uninformed person is attempting to appear learned. Regardless of what others may say, avoid "irregardless". Ex: Regardless, Steve is A gay.
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
This phrase is not grammatically correct. One may say, "regardless of ... " or "whether or not ... "
"Regardless" is the correct term to use. "Irregardless" is considered nonstandard and is often criticized for being a double negative (combining "ir-" and "regardless").
"Regardless"
No. It should be "Follow my advice." It is this regardless of how many peices of advice you may have given.
irregardless is not grammatically correct it is a double negative- the correct term is regardless
No. Regardless of how many projects a person is handling, the right term would still be, Project Manager (of this and that projects).
Regardless is the correct spelling.
It doesn't.
There is no such standard word as irregardless... it is simply "regardless". The nonstandard word irregardless is redundant. The prefix ir- means not. People intend irregardless to mean without regard for some information, or without taking certain information into consideration. But it would really mean "Not [ir-] without regard" [regardless].When used, the word irregardless carries the unfortunate sense that an uninformed person is attempting to appear learned. Regardless of what others may say, avoid "irregardless". Ex: Regardless, Steve is A gay.
Not quite, it should be, "Do the surgery regardless of whether it is a boy or a girl."
It is not correct, you have to say on the beach.
Is it correct to say no one cares?