Capital T on The and a Capital T on Thursday
Exactly as you wrote it: The members of the Board made a decision. Capitalizing "Members" may also be acceptable
Yes, it is correct to say "each of the existing members" to refer to every individual currently in the group or organization.
The board members waited until a quorum was reached before starting the meeting.
"His factious behavior caused tension within the group, leading to disagreements and divisions among members."
Example sentence - Contrary to popular belief, the votes were not counted correctly.
Exactly as you wrote it: The members of the Board made a decision. Capitalizing "Members" may also be acceptable
No. The word values, should be singular. A grammatically correct version is, "Your organization is composed of members who value leadership and creativity."
yes
Is this a complete imperative (ordering) sentence? If so, "protect yourself and your family members" is correct. If it is only a predicate (someone else is doing the protecting) then it's fine, but not complete.
Although the choices are incomplete, sentence B has correct direct objects:"The chairman asked members...""The chairman asked us...""The chairman asked the members and us..."
Thursday, February 16, 2012. (soon!)
Whom are your family membersorWho are members of your family
Members of both political parties feel strongly about this issue. My daughter has attended five birthday parties in the last two weeks! All interested parties are urged to attend the town meeting on Thursday afternoon.
It will be open to all on Thursday 1/12/12.
It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun. Examples: The board supports our decisions. The Federal Reserve Board supports our decisions.
Yes, it is correct to say "each of the existing members" to refer to every individual currently in the group or organization.
"all answers are correct!!!!!!!!!!"