No, the correct phrasing is "It was said that she and Nick were just good friends." The subject pronoun "her" should be changed to the subjective pronoun "she" to maintain correct grammar.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "this date and time is good for me" when referring to a specific date and time that works for you.
The grammatically correct response to "How are you?" is typically "I'm good, thank you," or "I'm doing well, thanks."
Good job ...or you can say job well done...
Yes, grammatically correct but unclear in meaning; for example:a very good work (of art)a very good work (of charity)a very good job (of work)a very good job (to work)There is insufficient information in your question to know its meaning.
Yes, that is a grammatically correct sentence. It conveys the idea that the experience has been positive and educational.
Yes, it is grammatically correct because both she and i are subject pronouns. However, it is customary to say "You and she are good friends" rather than "She and you." In general, the order is (you) (he/she/they/it) (I/we).
No it is not a good sentence would be Movement is what my friends and i enjoy.
No. Him and me is correct.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "this date and time is good for me" when referring to a specific date and time that works for you.
The grammatically correct response to "How are you?" is typically "I'm good, thank you," or "I'm doing well, thanks."
yup...
good at studies
It is grammatically correct, but not good English because things cannot be in despair. Use "desperate."
The sentence: "He concurs this book is good." is not grammatically correct. Alternatives include "He concurs; this book is good." or "He concurs that this book is good." A sentence cannot have two verb-subject pairs without some kind of conjunction.
When a book is good, I get lost. It was this sentence grammatical corrected.
first i think no then i think yes
No, you would say "good-looking picture" or "the picture looks good."