The word present is used incorrectly in this sentence.
'present' usually means:
* a gift * to make known formally * to produce
and this does not make sense in the context of the sentence.
The sentence should read:
"In the presence of our loved ones we will exchange vows of marriage in Christ's love"
"He answered the difficult question correctly."
Since you put this question in Grammar Spelling and Punctuation, what is your question? The sentence is spelled correctly and punctuated correctly, and the grammar is fine.
Correctly is the adverb of correct.An example sentence is: "answer this question correctly".Another example is: "he correctly pieced the jigsaw together".
Your question needs to be in a complete sentence, so that people can understand what you want to know about children and no marriage, and so they can answer your question.
Correctly is the adverb of correct.An example sentence is: "answer this question correctly".Another example is: "he correctly pieced the jigsaw together".
if i have interpreted your question correctly then the answer is simple: they defended the FORT
Yes. That is a correct sentence, or at least a correctly formed sentence*. But there is no content that can be judged as right or wrong. (*It is an interrogative sentence, one that asks a question.)
your question is not correctly check your spelling
I am answering your question. I am hungry. The dog and I went for a walk.
No, the sentence "Do you go to school, Shania?" is punctuated correctly with a question mark after "school" and a comma between "school" and "Shania" to separate the direct address.
Correctly is the adverb in that sentence.
If applicable, include your age. Only answer the question if applicable to the position.