the correct question would be:
Tanzt in diesem Haus Friedrich? - Does Friedrich dance in this house
or if u mean it as a normal sentence:
In diesem Haus tanzt Friedrich - Friedrich is dancing in this house
Yes, you can begin a sentence with the word "or" when presenting options or alternatives. For example, "Or you can choose to study abroad for a semester."
'Did she came...' is incorrect. 'Did she come...' is correct.
No, the sentence should be "He elucidated his position on this matter by his silence." The verb "elucidated" should come before the subject "he" to create a grammatically correct sentence.
No and there are spelling mistakes as well.
The correct form is Robert and I. Myself and Robert is incorrect.
The sentence is gramatically correct.
It is nearly correct. It would be "In dem (diesem) Haus tanzt Friederich." (engl. "Friederich is dancing in this house.")
It's incorrect. In this sentence "Test" is the object. Therefore it must be put into the accusative.The correct sentence should be:" Der Lehrer verbessert den Text".
No 'It's for you' would be though
No because and is a fanboy and it would not be gramatically correct
It's a weird sentence, but it is grammatically correct.
That's not even a complete sentence. The words TO, SAT, THIS, PEOPLE and IS can not be combined in any way to make a grammatically correct sentence. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Assuming the question should be Is it gramatically correct to say, "This people is..."? then it is not correct. One should say, "These people are...".
Yes, but it depends on which context it's used in.
my big fat mama
You take the word, and put it in a gramatically correct sentence. :) *HEY NATALIE ;) FROM: BANANA*
That sentence is grammatically correct.
No. That phrase doesn't have a verb.