'Rhoda's crazy' is grammatically correct.
To make a sentence grammatically correct, you may need to add missing punctuation marks, ensure subject-verb agreement, use appropriate verb tense, and make sure the sentence structure follows the rules of grammar.
Well, right now the sentence literally means: "He sees crazy." This sentence does not make sense. In order to correctly write the sentence meaning, "He looks/appears crazy" (gramatically correct), we must incorporate the verb ,,aussehen'', meaning "to look like", "to seem", or "to appear". The German verb ,,aussehen'' is a seperable prefix verb. What does this mean? The ,,aus" part of the verb gets moved to the end of the sentence! Otherwise, the other part of the verb, ,,sehen", gets conjugated in the same way that ,,sehen" does. So, in order to correctly write this sentence, you must write, "Er sieht verrückt aus." OR, maybe you wanted to write, "Er sieht Verrücktheit"! This means, "He sees craziness". Either way, "Er sieht verrückt" is NOT grammatically correct. Hope this helps a lot! -Ubermensch00 :)
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
A bit grammatically incorrect, but tú eres loco en la cabeza means "you're crazy in the head" and y tu pendejomeans "and you, dumba**"
This is not a question as it stands, but I assume it is a task you have been given. Depending on the text, you could put all the verbs into the infinitive, and the exercise could be putting them into a suitable tense. Or you could ask for a list of all the adverbs in the text. Of course you could ask for a grammatical analysis of a particular sentence.
To make a sentence grammatically correct, you may need to add missing punctuation marks, ensure subject-verb agreement, use appropriate verb tense, and make sure the sentence structure follows the rules of grammar.
Yes, the sentence he went crazy when his wife burnt his breakfast is a correct sentence.
Well, right now the sentence literally means: "He sees crazy." This sentence does not make sense. In order to correctly write the sentence meaning, "He looks/appears crazy" (gramatically correct), we must incorporate the verb ,,aussehen'', meaning "to look like", "to seem", or "to appear". The German verb ,,aussehen'' is a seperable prefix verb. What does this mean? The ,,aus" part of the verb gets moved to the end of the sentence! Otherwise, the other part of the verb, ,,sehen", gets conjugated in the same way that ,,sehen" does. So, in order to correctly write this sentence, you must write, "Er sieht verrückt aus." OR, maybe you wanted to write, "Er sieht Verrücktheit"! This means, "He sees craziness". Either way, "Er sieht verrückt" is NOT grammatically correct. Hope this helps a lot! -Ubermensch00 :)
Either of these are correct. :)
you are crazy
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
you are crazy
My sister is so crazy 4 this guy!
you are crazy
He acts crazy when he gets mad (angry). His crazy jokes makes me laugh. Mad is another word for angry. That idea is crazy.
The multiple colors of paint splashed across the walls were colorful and crazy. When I have soda i get a little crazy!
It's norwegian, but not correct, the correct sentence would be: "God natt, du gale jævla rockestjerne" It means: "Good night, you crazy f'n (bas word) rockstar"