Are you coming today correct?

Are you coming today correct?

“Are you coming today or tomorrow?” is grammatically correct. Because without interrogative pronouns there are innumeral questions in English.

Will you come or are you coming?

Asking “Will you come with me?” is asking for your consent and possible consequent action, but “Are you coming with me?” is asking you about your present intention, plans, or action.

Is it correct to say right?

correct is the Latin form and right is basically the same connected with Latin rect-us. We say That’s absolutely right. But right has also the meaning to the right side, so correct is sometimes clearer as it is unambigous.

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Is Come with me grammatically correct?

“It’s actually completely correct,” says Spartz. “Grammar school grammar rules tell you not to end a sentence with a preposition, but it’s not a preposition. It’s actually a particle as part of a phrasal verb. ‘With’ is, in fact, part of the verb.

Which is correct as of today or as on today?

Senior Member. Those sentences are both correct. I have to disagree somewhat with sdgraham, as there is a sense of “as of” in which it does carry an implication for the future. That’s the sense we see in “As of today, all passengers must check their luggage.” In that usage, “as of today” means “from today onward.”

How do you say I’m coming?

I’m coming, da-DA-da. So the syllable ‘com-‘ will have the shape of a stressed syllable, where the voice will go up a little, then come down in pitch. Com-, com-. Coming.

When to say came or come?

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The correct way of saying /writing it would be: “I have come”(Past tense) I came is used when you are speaking of the past. Something that already happened. Thus you came earlier…. I have come —in grammatical term– is Present Perfect Tense.

How do you say politely right?

10 expressions to Use In Speaking And Writing:

  1. Yes, that’s right.
  2. You’re quite right.
  3. Yes, that’s correct.
  4. That’s spot on.
  5. You’re dead right (there).
  6. Absolutely.
  7. You’ve hit the nail on the head.
  8. You could say so.

How do you say right in politely?

The polite word for “right” is “correct”.

Which is correct I have come or came?

You cannot say ” I have came” It is grammatically incorrect. The correct way of saying /writing it would be: “I have come”(Past tense) I came is used when you are speaking of the past. Something that already happened. Thus you came earlier….

Can you come with me meaning?

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come with (someone or something) To accompany someone. In informal situations, the phrase can end at “with” and convey the same meaning.