Kelly didn’t have any lunch today.
The sentence, What would you like for lunch, is an interrogatory. It asks a question.
What did you have for lunch. It makes much more sense than what did you had for lunch.
There are two ways to correct this sentence, which is an ungrammatical mixture of direct and indirect speech.First, you can turn it into direct speech by using the appropriate punctuation (quotation marks and a question mark):Jerry asked "How was the lunch you had with mother?"Second, you can turn it into indirect speech by rewriting it, for example:Jerry asked her how the lunch with their mother had been.Note that when you turn a question from direct to indirect speech there are two essential elements. One is that the order of the verb and subject is reversed: 'how was the lunch' becomes 'how the lunch had been'. The other is that the tense of the verb goes a step further back into the past: 'was' becomes 'had been'.
Both are correct, but it depends on whether this phrase is the subject of the sentence or the object: grandmother and I went to the park. They bought lunch for grandmother and me.
All it needs is a question mark. Have you had lunch? That is grammatically correct.
Yes.
"Did you eat your beets at lunch?" - Beets is the correct homophone for this sentence, as it refers to the vegetable.
Yes.
mark exclaimed we certainly have correct
Kelly didn’t have any lunch today.
Yes, this is a run-on sentence, because it contains two independent clauses (each can stand alone as a sentence) that are not separated by any punctuation or conjunction.The following are examples of how to correct this error:Before lunch you played volleyball. After lunch you played again.Before lunch you played volleyball; after lunch you played again.Before lunch you played volleyball, and after lunch you played again.
I think the correct way to say it is " Have you eaten a nutritious lunch?" Hope it helps!
No, it should read "Will you have a potluck lunch here, pending reservations?"
I think I would write: "We went shopping after lunch." Or, to be even more correct: "We went shopping after we ate lunch."
The sentence, What would you like for lunch, is an interrogatory. It asks a question.
No, the correct sentence would be "Who is the singing woman?" by adding a question mark at the end. It is asking for the identity of a woman who is singing.