That sentence is not correct. I can't even tell what you are trying to say.
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Is this a correct sentence? To prove it once agin and to bliss you we now have a special offer
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct. It is a complete sentence with a subject (your parents) and a verb (are gone).
The waiter is now called a server if you are politically correct.
Dad yelled irritably from his bedroom, "Cut the noise now! I need to get some sleep!"
Really now alone should be "Really, now?".
The correct way to write the sentence is: "Give me those papers now," Liz said.
The sentence "It's time I went home" is correct. It indicates that now is the appropriate moment for the speaker to leave and return to their home.
No. "Its" should be it's (it is) and capitalized because it's at the beginning of the sentence. "Your" should be you're (you are). "It's what you're doing now." "It is what you are doing now."
It's grammatically correct but slightly peculiar. It would be more normal to say something like "I am completing the work now" or "I will complete the work now" rather than "I complete the work now".
Not Entirely. The initial "whom" in this sentence is the subject of the sentence. When you are using the word "who" or "whom" you've got to pay attention to what the "who" is acting as. When "who" is referring to the subject, you leave off the -m, on "whom," but when you are talking about the direct object of the sentence, then "whom" is perfectly acceptable.So Grammatically speaking "Who has whom now" would be the correct form of this sentence.-------------------------------------------------Whom is used as the object of the sentence and whoas the subject (the one performing the action), therefore "Who has whom now."