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, you must say I was in London 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
"She didn't come" is the correct way of saying this. You could say "She never came" or "She didn't want to come" or "It was her fault she didn't come and nothing to do with me" or "It doesn't matter whether she came or not" After a form of 'to do' you always say the infinite vrom of the verb
Thanking someone for yesterday infers that someone actually gave you yesterday. It would be better to say, "Thank you for making yesterday special."
No this is incorrect grammar. To make the sentence grammatically correct you should say: One of my cousins came yesterday.
No, you must say I was in London yesterday.
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."
It doesn't sound right to me. Probably you are trying to say: 'Three new families came last night', meaning perhaps that three new families checked into your hotel last night, or similar. Generally we don't say 'yesterday night' but rather 'last night.
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."
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.
You are in school would be correct if it was said like "I am in school." You are at school would be correct when used like "She is at school."But, this answer does not clarify a thing. Namely, whether it is more correct to say "at school" or "in school" - and if both are correct, which one is used in which situation/context.
"She didn't come" is the correct way of saying this. You could say "She never came" or "She didn't want to come" or "It was her fault she didn't come and nothing to do with me" or "It doesn't matter whether she came or not" After a form of 'to do' you always say the infinite vrom of the verb
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