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∙ 8y agoYes, it is correct to say "which presentations to attend is your choice" because it emphasizes that the decision of attending specific presentations is up to the individual's discretion.
Yes, it is correct to say "I will be present during the meeting next week." This conveys your intention to attend the meeting and be physically there.
The correct phrase is "obligated to." For example, "I am obligated to attend the meeting."
The correct phrase is "Is the multiple choice correct? Why or why not?" In this case, "multiple choice" is a noun, so it should be preceded by the article "the" to indicate specificity. The phrase "multiple choice" is acting as a singular noun here because it refers to the concept as a whole, not multiple individual choices.
'Who' would be the appropriate use. 'Whom' and 'who' are difficult to use at the best of times. If you're not sure on how to use them or haven't had linguistic training, the easiest way of thinking about it is to substitute the word for 'he/she' (who) or 'him/her' (whom) and see which one works appropriately.
No, it is not correct to say "back in home." The correct expression is "back home" or "back at home."
correct !
Yes, it is correct to say "I will be present during the meeting next week." This conveys your intention to attend the meeting and be physically there.
No, it should be "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting"."Neither he nor you" is a compound subject, so you need to use the subjective form of the pronouns. "Him" is the objective form, so it is not correct here. One way to test this is to simplify the sentence by using a simple subject instead of a compound subject: It is easier to see that you would say "he expects to attend" and not "him expects to attend".There is another aspect of this example that can be confusing: "he" and "you" take different forms of the verb "expect": you would say "he expects to attend", but "you expect to attend". The rule in this case is to use the verb form that is correct for the subject closer to it. That is why it is correct to say "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting" rather than "neither he nor you expects to attend the meeting".
Say the sentence without Michael in it. That is a picture of I. That is a picture of me. Me is the correct choice.
Its problem is not grammatical, but idiomatic. We say take an exam, or sit for an exam, but we do not say attend an exam. A sentence may be grammatically correct and still wrong.
"It is correct to say 'She is a girl like me.' The pronoun 'me' is the correct choice in this sentence because it is the object of the preposition 'like.'"
That is not quite correct. If you are going to call someone a former wife, you have to say whose former wife she is, such as my former wife is unable to attend the hearing, or Fred's former wife is unable to attend the hearing. If you don't know whose former wife she is, just say she is unable to attend the hearing. Otherwise it just sounds silly.
It is correct to say that American Express company and Mark Foundation cordially invite you to attend the annual luncheon.
On a multiple-choice question, all the answers listed are correct.
A guest is someone who has been invited to a program. So in my knowledge, it will be inappropriate to say or use "invited guest". Thanks
Though "correct" and "right" mean the exact same thing, I'd say "correct" is more of what a host on a game show might say, whereas "right" is agreeing with someone or acknowledging their choice.
Both would be correct grammar, but "at your school" would probably be more suitable.