If you are an applicant and you are telling some one about this, then you should tell like " i had an interview on xyz date " or i had an interview with xyz company for the post of xyz
Yes, 'I hope that you were sincere when you gave me the advice.' is a correct sentence.
You would say that you gave the interview; on the other hand, the interviewee took it.
Yes, very!
My teacher gave me the word inlegible, which I don't know how to use in a correct sentence.
In the sentence, Clara had gave or given the tape to Ana, the correct verb to be used is given. In this past perfect sentence the auxiliary verb hadalways takes another verb, given, in the past participle form.
The error is the use of "I" instead of "me." The correct wording should be "He gave advice to my brother and me."
The clerk gave me a total, but she added it wrong.She gave me the correct total and I paid my bill.
In the sentence, "Mary parents gave her a watch at her party." the noun Mary is the incorrect form. The noun 'Mary' should be the possessive form to show that the 'parents' are the parents of Mary.The correct sentence is: "Mary'sparents gave her a watch at her party."The nouns in the sentence are:Mary'sparentswatchparty
Paul gave the flowers to Tom and me. Also, the first sentence makes no sense. Did you mean "the thirty fourth rule of grammar"?
No, the correct phrasing is "Bob and I" when you are the subject of the sentence. For example, "Bob and I went to the store." Use "me" when you are the object of the sentence or preposition, such as "She gave the gift to Bob and me."
I think this sentence should be: Rocco gave his friends snacks in plastic bags.
Well, if I am correct on what you are saying: You could say: "She gave me a nudge." Hope this helps :D