Well, I need something to keep me active, so I'm making a group of people who correct every spelling, punctuation, and grammar mistake they can find.
Who wants to spend their time looking for other people's errors?
That almost sounds derogatory. Sorry. It was meant to be an enrollment question.
OH NO! MY LAZY SPELLING IS GOING TO CATCH UP WITH ME HERE! um...here's a tip, ehehe, Sweets, I, Myself, has not done any bad grammar. Trust me...
I see many errors in those sentences. I will give you a hint. All sentences are supposed to start with a capital letter; the only other words that have the first letter capitalized are proper nouns and titles, and the word "I." The word "myself" is not supposed to be capitalized, and the conjugation for "have" in the present tense singular first person is "have."
That sentence fragment is lacking capitalization, a subject, a verb, and punctuation.
If it truly is a sentence fragment, it does not need capitalization, a subject, a verb, and punctuation.
It should not be a sentence fragments. Sentence fragments are bad; therefore, if you add a subject, a verb, and punctuation, you would be making it into a sentence.
If it truly is a sentence fragment, it does not need capitalization, a subject, a verb, and punctuation.
It should not be a sentence fragments. Sentence fragments are bad; therefore, if you add a subject, a verb, and punctuation, you would be making it into a sentence.
OH NO! MY LAZY SPELLING IS GOING TO CATCH UP WITH ME HERE! um...here's a tip, ehehe, Sweets, I, Myself, has not done any bad grammar. Trust me...
I see many errors in those sentences. I will give you a hint. All sentences are supposed to start with a capital letter; the only other words that have the first letter capitalized are proper nouns and titles, and the word "I." The word "myself" is not supposed to be capitalized, and the conjugation for "have" in the present tense singular first person is "have."
It should not be a sentence fragments. Sentence fragments are bad; therefore, if you add a subject, a verb, and punctuation, you would be making it into a sentence.
Define,"bad".
Bad is horrible.
Well, maybe incorrect is a better word. But that's still bad.
"Spelled" and "spelt" are both accepted in Great Britain, are they not? Therefore, you should use "spelled" to avoid the confusion of people mixing it up with a type of wheat.