Not exactly. The correct grammar would be; "She bought a lot of furniture for the new house." It doesn't need an "s" for plural.
John and you bought a house
The sentence "I bought a new pair of shoes" used the incorrect homophone. The correct homophone should be "I brought a new pair of shoes."
the correct sentence is the house is under repair.
Here is what you should try... How do you write establishin a sentence?
The correct sentence is "you drove past his house." The word "past" is used to indicate movement beyond or beside something, while "pass" is a verb meaning to move by or beyond something.
Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct.
The correct sentence is "You drove past his house." "Past" is used as a preposition to indicate movement beyond something, while "pass" is a verb indicating action.
He caught a cold from the draft coming in the window. This sentence uses the correct homophone.
No, using the verb 'flood', the auxiliary verb 'has' calls for the past tense of the main verb: Your house has flooded. Using the word 'flood' as a noun, calls for an article preceding the noun: Your house has a flood. Your house has the flood.
The broker saved us a lot of money when we bought our house.
The surgeon bought a beautiful new house. The - article surgeon - noun bought - verb a - article beautiful - adjective new - adjective house - noun (direct object) http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/definitions.htm
She really likes "that" house over there.