yeah it sounds grammatically correct
'Did she came...' is incorrect. 'Did she come...' is correct.
I came to your office several times and did not see (s) you._______Better:I came to your office but could not find you.
The phrase "she came ot my home yesterday" is correct... although a little formal. If you are talking to friends, you would be more likely to hear "she came over" rather than "she came to my home." But if you are writing a paper for class, the form you already have is probably best.
I can think of many correct re-phrasings of "Is she came" If she came Is she lame Is she tame After that, it gets more complicated ... Did she come Is she coming Will she come
The correct sentence is "She didn't come." "Come" is the past participle of the verb "to come," so it should be used with the auxiliary verb "do" in the negative form as in this sentence.
'Did she came...' is incorrect. 'Did she come...' is correct.
Yes. That's correct.
I came to your office several times and did not see (s) you._______Better:I came to your office but could not find you.
The phrase "she came ot my home yesterday" is correct... although a little formal. If you are talking to friends, you would be more likely to hear "she came over" rather than "she came to my home." But if you are writing a paper for class, the form you already have is probably best.
"The men came today to lay the carpet in the living room" is grammatically correct. One could use less words though - "The men came today to lay the living room carpet".
The correct phrase is "I came here to study." This construction clearly indicates your purpose for being there, focusing on the action of studying. While "I came here for studying" is grammatically acceptable, it sounds less natural in everyday conversation. Using "to study" is more direct and commonly used.
Not a single friend came to the party makes more sense? Or maybe 'not one friend came to the party. To me it sounds like it could possibly be grammaticallty correct, but you never know.
The 2nd one
No this is incorrect grammar. To make the sentence grammatically correct you should say: One of my cousins came yesterday.
I can think of many correct re-phrasings of "Is she came" If she came Is she lame Is she tame After that, it gets more complicated ... Did she come Is she coming Will she come
No, that isn't grammatically correct.You should say "Why didn't you come to my home?"The helper verb "to do" is conjugated (did, did not) but the verb (come) is not.
Greek mythology. And your question is grammatically incorrect.