If you are making a direct address it should be "Thank you, John" - with the comma.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be either "This guy and John think he is" (if referring to two people thinking) or "These guys and John think he is" (if referring to a group of people).
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
No. It is a jumble of seemingly unrelated words.
The correct sentence would be:This is Luke's book.If Luke ended in an s, the apostrophe would be after the s ; since it doesn't, an apostrophe and then an s must be added for possession.Example: Jesus' disciples, John's disciples....
Yes, very!
It is unknown what you are referring to. Are you asking which statement is grammatically correct?John got shot ORJohn was shot?Think about it. Was is a verb and the sentence 'John was shot' is much more grammatically correct than 'John got shot' which sounds informal and can have multiple meanings.
The sentence, "John stands on the road wait for his mother," is grammatically incorrect. It should be, "John stands on the road and waits for his mother."
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be either "This guy and John think he is" (if referring to two people thinking) or "These guys and John think he is" (if referring to a group of people).
The sentence, John stands on the road wait for his mother, is grammatically wrong. You could use John stands on the road to wait for his mother, or John stands on the road. Wait for his mother.
A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."
"John is requested to bring pie" is grammatically correct.
Both are grammatically correct.But the usage of going to + verb or will + verb differs.When you are making a decision use will + verb. Use going to + verb when you have plans to do something.When you want to talk about future facts or things we believe to be true about the future, we use will + verb.So the sentence John will be 16 this month is probably the correct sentence to use as the sentence is about future facts.
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
No. It is a jumble of seemingly unrelated words.
The correct sentence would be:This is Luke's book.If Luke ended in an s, the apostrophe would be after the s ; since it doesn't, an apostrophe and then an s must be added for possession.Example: Jesus' disciples, John's disciples....