It should be "I love you." When conjugating the verb to love in the first person singular it becomes love and not loves.
'Love treasures lost' is an incomplete thought, an incomplete sentence. You need a subject (noun or pronoun) and a clause...She loves finding treasures that werelost.
No. It should be "Is the grammar right in this sentence?"
This is a specific case of the misconception that sentences should not end with prepositions, or even more generally, the false prohibition on prepositional stranding. In short, yes, it isproper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition if everything else about the sentence is correct. Others disagree but they are wrong. Every modern grammar text agrees that there is nothing at all wrong with preposition stranding. What is wrong, according the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, is to rearrange a sentence, to a form that is difficult to read or understand, in an effort to avoid preposition stranding.For a more in-depth answer, including the other side of the argument, see "Is it proper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition?". However, much of the debate has been moved to the "Discussion" page.
No. There is no main verb, only a dependent clause. the grammar is totally wrong anurag
A sentence with broken grammar is often referred to as a "grammatically incorrect" or "ungrammatical" sentence.
'Love treasures lost' is an incomplete thought, an incomplete sentence. You need a subject (noun or pronoun) and a clause...She loves finding treasures that werelost.
Grammar
"i did something wrong but the expert rectified it" (add your own grammar!)
The words Yeolla Daebak are not translatable into English. It is not clear if it is correct grammar or not.
That is not correct grammar. A better sentence would be "I went to the supermarket and found this item." In the proper sentence, there is an object and better structure.
This is grammatically wrong. But it's lyrics, so just let it be. Actually, the grammar of verse may be different from the grammar of prose. In this sentence, the relative pronoun "who" is understood.
The grammar of this sentence is beyond phenomenal.
The sentence "I arrived exactly at their cut off time" is not correct grammar because of the wrong diction used.
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
Yes, it is grammar, but your spelling is wrong; it's spelt grammar.
No. It should be "Is the grammar right in this sentence?"
This is a specific case of the misconception that sentences should not end with prepositions, or even more generally, the false prohibition on prepositional stranding. In short, yes, it isproper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition if everything else about the sentence is correct. Others disagree but they are wrong. Every modern grammar text agrees that there is nothing at all wrong with preposition stranding. What is wrong, according the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, is to rearrange a sentence, to a form that is difficult to read or understand, in an effort to avoid preposition stranding.For a more in-depth answer, including the other side of the argument, see "Is it proper grammar to end a sentence with a preposition?". However, much of the debate has been moved to the "Discussion" page.