his
The correct phrase is "Paul and I are going to a concert." When using pronouns in a compound subject, you should use the subject pronoun "I" instead of the object pronoun "me." A simple way to remember this is to remove the other person's name and check if the sentence still sounds correct: "I am going to a concert" is correct, while "me am going to a concert" is not.
The correct scale for concert pitch C on a tenor horn is a C major.
A concert F on a trumpet is the G note. Since a trumpet is pitched in Bb, trumpet players will always play one note above the concert pitch. Along with that trumpet players will always play in a different key from the concert pitch. Trumpet players will add two sharps to the concert pitch. i.e. If the concert pitch is Eb, 3 flats, then trumpet players will play in the key of F, 1 flat. trumpetman52
The correct sentence is, "Which month were the most cycles sold?" This phrasing focuses on identifying the month with the highest sales. The first sentence is grammatically incorrect because "was" should be "were" to agree with the plural subject "cycles."
Maybe if you went to there concert and they might even hand out free tickets to people that answer the right question.My friend won free tickets to Sydney Kings in Australia and they came to our school and you have to answer the questions and if you get it correct you receive free tickets to there next game.
That sentence is not correct. The correct usage of grammer in the sentence is: The first ones in line for concert tickets were Jose and he.
"How should the sentence above be rewritten to correct the subject-verb agreement error?"
It is correct.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.
He agrees with you. Or he is in agreement with you.
No. The past participle is sung."The girls have sung at this concert before."
A simple sentence.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
Yes. Best to keep the verb agreement, if possible.
In grammar, an agreement refers to the relationship between words in a sentence, where they have to match in features like number, gender, or person. This ensures that the elements in a sentence are in harmony and the sentence is grammatically correct.
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.
The sentence, "After Joan extended a dinner invitation to Glen he reciprocated by inviting her to a concert" is correct, except that traditionally in the U. S. at least there should be a comma after "Glen", to set off an initial adverbial clause. In England, fewer commas of this kind tend to be used.