Not exactly. It should say: Please send your dad's mail ID and tell him to add my mail ID to his Messenger list.
Yes, a list can be used at the beginning of a sentence. It can help organize ideas and provide a clear structure for the information that follows. However, it's important to ensure that the list is grammatically correct and flows smoothly with the rest of the sentence.
This can fall under two different forms of sentence. One denoting a list, and one not. IE: Thomas is following Susanne. The following is a list of automobile parts you will need: So, this will largely depend on the kind of sentence you are forming and the information you are trying to get across to your audience.
The sentence "I need to pack three things: clothes, shoes, and toiletries" is not an example of correct colon usage. Colons should only be used to introduce a list, a definition, or an explanation, but in this sentence, there is no need to introduce a list as it flows naturally without the colon.
Yes, though to make it flow more smoothly, I would write "I have sent an email requesting that you be added to the list."
A sentence must contain a subject and a verb to be considered grammatically correct. If a group of words lacks this structure, it is not a complete sentence. It may be a sentence fragment, a phrase, or a list.
Yes
Yes, a list can be used at the beginning of a sentence. It can help organize ideas and provide a clear structure for the information that follows. However, it's important to ensure that the list is grammatically correct and flows smoothly with the rest of the sentence.
This can fall under two different forms of sentence. One denoting a list, and one not. IE: Thomas is following Susanne. The following is a list of automobile parts you will need: So, this will largely depend on the kind of sentence you are forming and the information you are trying to get across to your audience.
The sentence "I need to pack three things: clothes, shoes, and toiletries" is not an example of correct colon usage. Colons should only be used to introduce a list, a definition, or an explanation, but in this sentence, there is no need to introduce a list as it flows naturally without the colon.
Yes, though to make it flow more smoothly, I would write "I have sent an email requesting that you be added to the list."
The correct verb is IS:Everyone on the guest list is attending the dinner.When everyone is the subject of a sentence it takes a singular verb. Other indefinite pronouns that take a singular verb form are:anybodyanyoneanythingeverybodyeveryonenobodyno onenothingsomebodysomeonesomething
A sentence must contain a subject and a verb to be considered grammatically correct. If a group of words lacks this structure, it is not a complete sentence. It may be a sentence fragment, a phrase, or a list.
Yes. It does.
on the list
Someone wants to be added to your contacts list and you haven't granted or denied their request so it is "pending".
The correct spelling is naughty.An example sentence is: "Ben was on Santa's naughty list again for the fourth Christmas in a row".
"ON the list" is correct. We use "on" when referring to something being included on a list, like being one of the items listed.