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A music guru is someone who knows a lot about music or Musical Instruments...
I want to transfer it to my phone (not iphone) so i want the music with artists, albums, genres und cover attached to it. So i mean, if i right click on it on PC and go to properties- details, there should be a lot of info about music. Sorry for my bad english. :)
There are many types of music that the music group called Rudejam plays. The music group called Rudejam plays a lot of rap music and a lot of abstract music.
Yes Zayn Malik knows how to speak Arabic
A fake book is a book that gives you the general information about how to play a song. It won't be specific and detailed sheet music... more of the general information so that someone who knows a lot about music can quickly "fake" it. :) See this site for further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fake_book
It is not grammatically correct, no. The word is homework. "I have a lot of homework." or "I have homework in several classes."
A music guru is someone who knows a lot about music or Musical Instruments...
All three sentences are grammatically correct. Each one follows the standard subject-verb-object structure and uses appropriate punctuation.
The correct sentence is "Us students have a lot of work to do. Please return the book to us when you can."
Who knows the correct amount. But she probaly has quite a lot.
He knows a lot about crime and law (obviously), music (classical mostly), chemistry as well
The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That - 2010 A Plan for Sand Whale Music 1-4 was released on: Canada: 14 August 2010 USA: 9 September 2010
I'm pretty sure it is. It's casual, but it's correct. Here's the break down of the parts if you're curious: Subject: There? (Inverted order? If so, a lot?) Verb: Is (Linking Verb) Predicate Noun: A lot (If inverted order, there?) Prepositional Phrase: Of stuff Adverb: here (answers where) Not sure on the inverted order thing, but I'm pretty sure that "there is a lot of stuff here" is grammatically correct
It's not really a question and is not grammatically correct. It says, "I've lost a lot of French that I speak right now?"
Answer"A lot" is two words.Answerto put it in a correct form.. unlike the person who answered "which is correct "alot" or "a lot" A lot is correct ;D
There is a lot but English is a major one. There is so much writing and critiquing involved in art. That's also how you portray some things, through words. And, in all things, you have to be grammatically correct.
An example of a sentence with the word bonanza would be: There was a bonanza of letters in my mailbox. Bonanza means plentiful or a lot of. Therefor, substituting the definition for bonanza would make the sentence look like this: There was a lot of letters in my mailbox. Both sentences are grammatically correct and make sense.