If I understand your sentence it should read: Both he and I are well. Or: I am well and he is well, however that does not read as easily as the first example.
No and there are spelling mistakes as well.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.The pronoun 'I' is the subject of the relative clause 'who I am'.
"Welcome" is correct. "Well come" is not a standard English phrase.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
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 :)
I believe my offices and I are well known.
The clause / sentence has no meaning out of context. If it is a response, the somewhat archaic but correct construction is "I am fine, as I hope you are as well." You would not use the words "too" and "as well" in the same clause as that is redundant.
No and there are spelling mistakes as well.
bien actually means "well," such as how bien hecho means well done. In English grammar, sometimes you can use "good" in a sentence, and sometimes "well" can be used. The same goes for Spanish, only that it gets more complicated that, as you have to take into consideration other variations of bueno that might be gramatically correct, such as buen and buena._______________________________I've read that 'bien' is an adverb and that 'bueno' is an adjective.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.The pronoun 'I' is the subject of the relative clause 'who I am'.
Because the word "at" is a preposition and it is considered grammatically incorrect to end a sentence with a preposition. No. It is wrong because the "at" is unnecessary. An English sentence may properly end with preposition, for example: Forcing English to comply with Latin grammatical rules is a school-marm trick that no natural speaker puts up with.
To be gramatically correct, yes. You do italicize the title of a movie. (As well as books.) But if you're using something that can't use italics (such as a typewriter), you're supposed to underline it.
"Welcome" is correct. "Well come" is not a standard English phrase.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
Spoken English is often less formal than written English and less gramatically correct. That said, if 'txt spk' is counted... People generally don't use slang or abbreviations when writting formal documents.
Yes.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct.