No, It would be "The dog has eaten," or "The dog ate."Eat is the present tense. You want to match the tenses. If the dog is presently eating, you could say, "The dog eats." But if you are referring to the past eating behavior of the dog, it is as above, the dog has eaten, or the dog ate. I eat, you eat, they eat, is all present tense. Ate and eaten are both past tense, I have eaten, or I ate, etc.
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
No, it is not grammatically correct to say "what a fun." It should be corrected to "What fun!" to make it grammatically accurate.
It is not, but it is widely used because it conveys the general idea of the question as well as its grammatically correct version.No you should say "Where are you" the at at the end is not needed.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say "keep stick to." The correct phrase would be "keep sticking to" or "stick to."
No, the correct way to express this is to say "pay attention." "Put attention" is not a grammatically correct phrase in English.
It would be grammatically correct for the plural form, 'Squirrels eat fruits.' If you use the singular form, 'squirrel', you can say, 'A squirrel eatsfruits.'
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
the correct way to say it is both of them cause they both make sense...
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....
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say "what a fun." It should be corrected to "What fun!" to make it grammatically accurate.
No. Him and me is correct.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
ABSOLUTELY NOT! He and she were taking the dog for a walk. The pronoun 'her' is used for the object of a sentence or a preposition only.
It is not, but it is widely used because it conveys the general idea of the question as well as its grammatically correct version.No you should say "Where are you" the at at the end is not needed.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say "keep stick to." The correct phrase would be "keep sticking to" or "stick to."
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.