Not exactly. The correct grammar would be; "She bought a lot of furniture for the new house." It doesn't need an "s" for plural.
John and you bought a house
The sentence "I bought a new pair of shoes" used the incorrect homophone. The correct homophone should be "I brought a new pair of shoes."
the correct sentence is the house is under repair.
Here is what you should try... How do you write establishin a sentence?
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.
The latter sentence is correct: "You drove past his house."
The correct sentence is "You drove past his house." "Past" is used as a preposition to indicate movement beyond something, while "pass" is a verb indicating action.
Their house is over there; they're not there.
No, using the verb 'flood', the auxiliary verb 'has' calls for the past tense of the main verb: Your house has flooded. Using the word 'flood' as a noun, calls for an article preceding the noun: Your house has a flood. Your house has the flood.
The broker saved us a lot of money when we bought our house.
The surgeon bought a beautiful new house. The - article surgeon - noun bought - verb a - article beautiful - adjective new - adjective house - noun (direct object) http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/definitions.htm
She really likes "that" house over there.