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students go

If you want to use "goes," you have to make the subject singular:

A student goes.

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15y ago

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Is saying me and you can go to the park grammatically correct?

no


Is 'we are not feeling safe and we certainly cannot go out after dark' grammatically correct or is 'we do not feel safe and we certainly cannot go out after dark' grammatically correct?

Both are grammatically correct, but "do not feel" is better usage than "are not feeling."


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It could be construed as grammatically correct, with the following meaning: "You heard (that) the alarm goes off [every morning]." (Imagine, for example, a judge at a trial, summarising the evidence that has been presented in a murder trial.) However, taking it as it stands, as a complete sentence, it is incorrect. The following are correct versions (all with slightly different meanings): "You heard the alarm go off." "You heard the alarm going off." "You heard (that) the alarm went off."


I go to a parlor and ask''i want to pierce my baby's ear''Is this sentence grammatically correct?

This sentence is grammatically correct. However, it would be more correct to say, "I want you to pierce my baby's ear (or ears)."


Is it grammatically correct to say that you had to go?

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Is it gramatically correct to say you go to home instead of you go home?

It is not grammatically correct to say ' you go to home'. Instead you should leave out the word to, and say 'you, go home'.


Is a sentence As I was sick therefore I could not go there grammatically correct?

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