It's not entirely wrong, but it sounds redundant and awkward to my ear. Away implies travel, and travel implies away. Why not just say traveling? I was traveling. I was out of the country. I was out of the state. Or maybe best: I was in France. I was in Australia. Or maybe I was away on business. You get the idea.
The correct sentence is, "Do she and her husband travel?" because the number of people is plural, as in "Do they travel?"
We say "you were away" because "were" is the past tense form of the verb "to be" when referring to the second person singular or plural pronoun "you."
It is correct to say "those children", not "this children". You can also say "these children".
No, the correct way to say what you are trying to say is "I hope you were happy". If you take away the 'I hope' part of the statement it would you as follows.. I WAS happy You WERE happy
The grammatically correct way to say this phrase is "travel safely." This is because "safely" is an adverb modifying the verb "travel," whereas the adjective "safe" should only be modifying a noun. In this case, the word "travel" is used as a verb rather than a noun.
Thank you lord for a safe travel or thank you lord for the safe travel are all correct. The use of "the" is definite article while for "a" is for indefinite article.
correct travel sppeed
"A few meters away from our home" is not a correct grammar but the correct one is "Few meters away from our home."
Sarah and I Sarah and I is incorrect. You would not say "Meet with I" so you would not say "Meet with Sarah and I." It is grammatically correct to say "Meet with me." ... Soooo the correct answer is "Meet with Sarah and me." Hint: to figure out when to use I/me take away the other personor pronoun (like we did above) and see if the sentence is still grammatically correct, if so, that is the one you use!
About 1 kilometer away from our home is not a correct grammar.
other than the fact that the question should be in quotation marks, id say yes. the questions seems to be grammatically correct
It is not correct, you have to say on the beach.