No, the grammatically correct sentence would be: "I am annoyed by the way you behave."
No, the saying "to love is endurance" is not grammatically correct. It should be "to love is to endure" or "love is endurance."
No, "firsts" is not grammatically correct. It should be "first."
Yes, saying "taking a meeting" is grammatically correct. It means attending or participating in a meeting.
"Try saying three tall trees" is correct.
Unfortunately no. The correct phrase is "I will see you tomorrow." Alternately, you could say either "I will see you Monday", or "I will see you on Monday" -- with the proper noun "Monday", either is correct. "Tomorrow", however, is not a proper noun and thus "on" must be omitted.
No, the grammatically correct sentence would be: "I am annoyed by the way you behave."
no
No, the saying "to love is endurance" is not grammatically correct. It should be "to love is to endure" or "love is endurance."
Certainly. If one were to make a comparison saying "He can run as quick as a cheetah" then it would be grammatically correct.
No, "firsts" is not grammatically correct. It should be "first."
Yes, saying "taking a meeting" is grammatically correct. It means attending or participating in a meeting.
No. Since "circumspect" is an adjective, "I appreciate your circumspect" is about as grammatically correct as "I appreciate your clean". Saying "I appreciate your circumspect behavior" is correct, similar to "I appreciate your clean appearance".
"Try saying three tall trees" is correct.
No, it is not grammatically correct to say, 'revert back to'. You would simply say 'revert', as in 'Can we revert to the previous subject?' Revert means to go back (to something), so saying 'revert back to' is saying the same thing twice, which is called tautology.
No, the sentence "You are prejudice" is not grammatically correct. Prejudice is a noun, and you is a pronoun. The sentence essentially is saying that "you" are something that you can not possibly be - the noun prejudice. To make the point you're trying to make, you need an adjective to follow the verb "are." Prejudiced is the descriptive adjective form of prejudice, so the grammatically correct sentence should be "You are prejudiced."
Only if punctuated: Thanks, God. If not directly addressing the Almighty, Thank God is the correct form.