yes
It is correct to write TOM'S when referring to something that belongs to Tom. The apostrophe indicates possessiveness.
Tom and I on my Birthday.
I am not a grammar expert so this is a personal opinion. I think it is a sentence. Consider "Here's Tom" or "Here's the bus". They are sentences. Tom is here; the bus is here. Here's why means 'why is here', or 'this [here] is the reason [why]. It is not a particularly good sentence mind you, but it is a sentence.
The pronoun in the sentence is "you."
It would be Tom had been interviewed five times
Tom yelled, "Catch the Dog!"
'Tom hopes to do really well on this exam' is a correct sentence. Currently, the sentence is in the future and present tense. To change it to past, change 'hopes' to 'hoped'.
"Children present."
Mary, Tom, Bob, and Terri went to the show.
Inmate Hall arrived back to the center transported by Tom.
No. Every sentence requires a predicate (a verb or action word) and this phrase does not contain a predicate.
Bill and Tom Kaulitz were 21 yesterday on the 1st of September
tom hanks
It is correct to write TOM'S when referring to something that belongs to Tom. The apostrophe indicates possessiveness.
Paul gave the flowers to Tom and me. Also, the first sentence makes no sense. Did you mean "the thirty fourth rule of grammar"?
That is correct. You could also say: Tom has been unemployed for a month.
tom is an eavesdropper