In a line of dialogue in a story. Or if you are quoting a person. So if you were to say and 7 times consecutively, and i quoted you on paper, it would be grammatically correct.
In a grammatically correct sentence there must be a subject,verb and object agreement.
Certainly. If one were to make a comparison saying "He can run as quick as a cheetah" then it would be grammatically correct.
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Five is plural (more than one). Therefore, the correct sentence, grammatically speaking, would be "there are five of us".
The phrase "the box of blocks was dropped" is grammatically correct. It indicates that the box, which contains blocks, was the subject that experienced the action of being dropped. The sentence is clear and correctly uses the passive voice.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
This sentence is not grammatically correct. For the sentence to be grammatically correct, the space between "in" and "to" would have to be removed. Therefore the sentence should read "They are into skating."
The sentence is grammatically correct.
The sentence "Rhoda's Crazy" is not grammatically correct. It is missing a verb to make a complete sentence.
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
Yes, it is grammatically correct.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.
Two such words are had and that:Marty had had an exhausting day.She knew that that was not the right answer.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes. A grammatically correct sentence (to begin with) has to have a subject (int this case, hand) and a verb (is). The sentence does need to be capitalized and punctuated correctly though...