" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."
No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.
The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "The haunted house looks very mysterious to you." You can also say "You find the haunted house very mysterious."
It is always back home and not back to home as to is not added before home.
"He tours the house" is a grammatically proper sentence, but it would normally include an adverb of repetitious time, such as "frequently", at the end of the sentence as given. If the reference is to a single incident, it could be expressed more idiomatically in the present progressive tense as "He is touring the house."
It is very natural but informal English. Make it formally correct by hyphenating father in law into a single word: Father-in-law's.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "The haunted house looks very mysterious to you." You can also say "You find the haunted house very mysterious."
It is always back home and not back to home as to is not added before home.
Both are grammatically correct depending on how you are using it. Ex. "When can you come to my house?" or "When you can come to my house, we will finally be able to play my computer game."
Casa - House/home Fiesta - party However "Casa Fiesta" is not grammatically correct to mean "House party". It would mean something like "House of party"
"He tours the house" is a grammatically proper sentence, but it would normally include an adverb of repetitious time, such as "frequently", at the end of the sentence as given. If the reference is to a single incident, it could be expressed more idiomatically in the present progressive tense as "He is touring the house."
This is not a compound sentence. However, it could be reworded to, "My mother will not let my cat in the house because she dislikes them," to sound more grammatically correct.
He started playing around 7 years old at a house his mother was cleaning.
It is very natural but informal English. Make it formally correct by hyphenating father in law into a single word: Father-in-law's.
Scott-Edwards House was created in 1730.
James Scott House was created in 1900.
Upton Scott House was created in 1762.