The question makes no sense because both sentences mean different things. "It is you who HAS to work for it" is correct. "It is I who HAS to work" is correct as well.
I loved to work would be the correct wording
You can say "I just got off work."
Both "schoolwork" and "school work" are correct, but "schoolwork" is more commonly used as a single word to refer to academic assignments and tasks given to students to complete outside of regular class time.
You mean is the word NEGOTIABLE correct? Yes, it's 100% correct. Nice work.
Yes, grammatically correct but unclear in meaning; for example:a very good work (of art)a very good work (of charity)a very good job (of work)a very good job (to work)There is insufficient information in your question to know its meaning.
Does your brother work in a hospital? is the correct sentence.
That is the correct spelling of "work ethic" (diligence, perseverance).
In this sense, "reported to work" is correct. It's just an awkward sentence. You could change he first option to "reporting for work" and that would also be correct, but the position of the preposition is incorrect.
The sentence "It lacks agreement Possible correct alternatives are He is the one of the men who does the work or He is one of the men who do the work" are not of correct grammar.
Thinking is the hardest work why is he correct and incorrect
No, the correct way to say that would be... "You should just go to work"
No. It lacks agreement. Possible correct alternatives are: He is the one of the men who does the work, or He is one of the men who do the work.
correct
The correct spelling is workweek.
I loved to work would be the correct wording
It depends how you use it. If you use it after something it can be correct. But being in a sentence by itself isn't correct.
Everything will work out wonderfully.