Coming is the correct spelling.
The correct statement is: "Are your children coming home?"
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
The sentence "when you r coming" is not correct grammatically. It should be "When you are coming."
upcoming
Coming is the correct spelling.
No, as written it is incorrect. The correct version would be: When are you coming to get me? The word coming only has one m, not two. Other ways you could ask or write this include:When will you pick me upWhen are you picking me up
The correct statement is: "Are your children coming home?"
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
Coming
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be: "Are you coming to the lab in the afternoon?"
The sentence "when you r coming" is not correct grammatically. It should be "When you are coming."
Yes, "She's coming with us" is correct grammar. It is a shortened form of "She is coming with us."
2012
No, the correct phrase is "he knew winter was coming." The word "had" is unnecessary in this sentence.
"You are going there" is correct if the speaker is not at the location being referred to. "You are coming there" is correct if the speaker is already at the location being referred to.