Certainly. If one were to make a comparison saying "He can run as quick as a cheetah" then it would be grammatically correct.
It is 6 correct, or 25% wrong.
He got 6 wrong.
"To correct" means to make something right, or in terms of marking tests, to mark what is wrong. The correct answer means the answer that is right or proper.
10/40 wrong means 30/40 correct 30/40 = 75% correct
The correct verses will be: (1) he ran quickly and/or (2) he runs quickly.
5% = .05 of = multiply .05 * 145 7.25 (correct my math if I'm wrong, I did that really quick in my head)
No, the correct phrase is "You are a quick learner." "You are" is the correct way to start a sentence in this case since it is referring to the listener.
left,wrong
yeah , i think is correct say a lot of thanks for quick response...
There is nothing wrong at all with this salutation. It is from Middle English and is not used very often anymore. It means to be successful and quick in the task at hand.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
The Esperanto words for correct and wrong are korekta and malbone.
Certainly. If one were to make a comparison saying "He can run as quick as a cheetah" then it would be grammatically correct.
There are loads of ways: If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (108, -1) and you get 1 correct; If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (132, -2) and you get 1 correct; If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (156, -3) and you get 1 correct; and so on, OR If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (65, -2) and you get 2 correct;If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (88, -4) and you get 2 correct; and so on, OR skipping a whole lot of intermediate possibilities, If the scores for a correct and wrong answers are (4, -12) and you get 24 correct.
Runs quick