no, the verb that comes after will is always verb 1 !
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
he is the simple subject and goes is the verb. the correct name would be predicate instead of verb
~I believe that is correct but putting in the word "very" is repetitive and unnecessary.Instead I would say "The same thing goes here".
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
Does she go to the market is right. The first one is the wrong version of go.
Yes, the sentence is correct; however, "coorect" is spelled correct.
Neither is correct. The correct phrase is 'goes shopping' (no for no to) He goes shopping on a Monday.
Yes!
Noun - person - Kari, place - school, or a thing - none in this sentence
The sentence All credits go to him, is not correct grammar, and it should be corrected to All credit goes to him.
The correct answer is:C. stands for a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
Correct punctuation is the proper use of punctuation marks within a sentence to provide a clear meaning, where a change in punctuation can alter that meaning. Examples: "This bus goes downtown." (statement) "This bus goes downtown?" (question) --- The boy said, "Let's eat, Grandma!" The boy said, "Let's eat Grandma." (he's a cannibal?)
Write the word or words that goes go in the sentence. The subject is "word," singular, so the verb must agree by also being singular.
Is my daughter which goes to scool Neither is correct - which or that are not used with persons who is used.Is my daughter who goes to schoolBut this question is incomplete should be something more egIs my daughter who goes to school allowed in for freeThere should be a question mark at the end of the question but wiki.answers wont let me save this answer if I put in a question mark.
repercussion
he is the simple subject and goes is the verb. the correct name would be predicate instead of verb
We need a comprehensive overview. He goes to a comprehensive school.