The correct phrase is "Have you reached safely?" This is because the verb "reached" is in the past participle form, which requires the auxiliary verb "have" to form the present perfect tense. "Do you reached safely" is grammatically incorrect because "do" is used with the base form of the verb, not the past participle.
Both HAVE and DO are auxiliary verbs, but you can't use DO with "reached." When you use DO as an auxiliary, the verb reverts to its bare form and it is DO that is conjugated. This is called do support and used for emphasis or questions.
"Have you reached home safely?" (present perfect - have reached)
"Does she reach home safely on the bus?" (does reach)
"I always do reach home safely." (do reach)
We only let men in so I can safely say no.
they are close both have one the diamond awards so its hard to say i would say mariah b/c she reached legendary status in such a short time
The Outfield is an English pop rock trio from London, England. The songs "Your Love", "Say It Isn't So", and "Everytime You Cry", all reached the top 20 on the US Billboard 200 rankings.
# the soulja boy single reached number one in 2007 but reserch say that the song meaning is sex and putting a bed steet on a girls back disagres to sleep with you.# the soulja boy single reached number one in 2007 but reserch say that the song meaning is sex and putting a bed steet on a girls back disagres to sleep with you.
According to Wikipedia - the single 'Say you're just a friend' reached number 1 in the Ukrainian chart - but nowhere else.
No. Say, "Have you reached Delhi?" You don't need the "at".
Yes, it is correct to say "Did you reach safely?" to inquire about someone's safe arrival at a destination. However, a more common phrasing might be "Did you arrive safely?"
It is more common to say "I arrived safely" to indicate that you have gotten to your destination without any issues or concerns. Saying "I reached safe" could be understood, but "I arrived safely" is more standard.
The passive form of "Did you reach your home safely?" is "Was your home reached safely by you?" which is very awkward indeed.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
It is not correct because the verb "reached" requires an object. As such, it should be phrased "You would have reached it two months ago" or, in place of the it, you can use any other noun or pronoun as an object.
You should say "you could be reached on a phone no", not "you could be reached at a phone no"But the no at the end of both your phrases is also grammatically incorrect.So you should really say "you could not be reached on a phone," if I understand correctly the meaning of you phrase.
'He reached safe.' is incorrect. The noun 'safe' is a word for a metal strongbox. I don't think that he was reaching for a safe. If he was, then it should say 'a safe' or 'the safe'. The other use of the word 'safe' is an adjective, a person can't reach for an adjective. The noun form for the adjective 'safe' is 'safety'. A correct sentence is 'He reached safety.' (a safe place).'Please speak loud.' is technically correct, the word 'loud' is an adverb but it sounds a bit clumsy. Alternates are 'Please speak loudly.' or 'Please speak aloud.' Both 'loudly' and 'aloud' are also adverbs which can modify the verb 'speak'.
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.
There would be nothing incorrect in saying drive safe, better to say drive safely.
Yes and no. Generally we say a matter is in discussion. Use on only in this sense: On further discussion a consensus was reached