No. Say should have worn. Worn is the past participle.
No, it is not correct grammatically. The correct phrasing would be "Should I take these?" or "Should I take these ones?"
Yes, that is correct. But there should not be an article("a") before "correct".
No. "Irresistibly" should be changed to "irresistible," then it would be grammatically correct.
Place a comma after "cold" and a period at the end. "Because the weather was so cold" is an initial adverbial dependent clause and therefore needs a comma at its end.
Yes, "similar to" is grammatically correct and commonly used to show a comparison between two things that are alike. For example: "This dress is similar to the one she wore last week."
That is the correct spelling of "wore" (past tense of 'to wear').
Ellie wore her sister's dress.
correct
That is the correct spelling of "sported" (wore, displayed).
Type your answer here... No they ain't
The sentence 'Lea's first green head band ever she wore' is not correct grammar. There is no verb (predicate). A complete sentence might say "Lea's green headband was the first one she ever wore."
By itself, no. "Wore something formal today," has no subject. In informal writing you could say the sentence has an assumed subject of "I," so for example: Dear Diary, Wore something formal today. Went to the party. Had a good time. But if you add an explicit subject, it's definitely correct: Jane wore something formal today. My daughter also wore something formal today.
correct
I assume she was, because she was pharaoh. (don't correct me, she wore a fake beard.)
That is the correct spelling of diamond (jewel or shape). Example: She wore a diamond ring.
No, it is not correct grammatically. The correct phrasing would be "Should I take these?" or "Should I take these ones?"
Maribeth's wore sunglasses even inside; her eyes were highly sensitive to light.