The word 'Shelp' is a proper noun, a name, usually a surname. The plural form is Shelps.
Example sentence:
The Shelp family lives on this street. That is the home of the Shelps.
"It is you who have decayed" is correct. In this case, "who" refers to the plural pronoun "you" which requires the plural form of the verb "have."
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
No because the linking verb you use is in the past subjunctive plural form but you must use "was" a past indicative plural form.
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Open envelopes and then reseal them." The pronoun "them" should be used to refer to the plural noun "envelopes."
The plural of "sentence" is "sentences."
Woody Shelp's birth name is Woodrow Lee Shelp.
No. As 'you' refers to either second person singular or plural noun, it takes a plural verb of 'to be'. As you want to refer to the past tense in your sentence, the plural verb of 'to be' in the past tense is 'were'. The correct sentence should be like this: You were not there.
Ronald Shelp was born in 1941.
Woody Shelp went by Woody.
"It is you who have decayed" is correct. In this case, "who" refers to the plural pronoun "you" which requires the plural form of the verb "have."
Woody Shelp was born in 1927, in Bancroft, Michigan, USA.
John Shelp Cobblestone House was created in 1836.
There "are" no "exudates" (plural).
No. The subject is plural (there are two subjects) so the correct sentence would be "David and Jennifer are fine."
A sentence starts with a capital letter: 'The...'The noun scissor is incorrect; the singular and plural form is 'scissors', a shortened form of 'a pair of scissors' and the plural 'pairs of scissors'.Corrected sentence: 'The scissors is lying on the table.'
No because the linking verb you use is in the past subjunctive plural form but you must use "was" a past indicative plural form.
The correct verb is "Have any...."The indefinite pronoun 'any' functions as both singular and plural. In the example sentence, the pronoun 'any' is referring to the plural noun 'relatives'.