Neither, apparently, see related links.
you are in the bus That is an idiomatic expression, and the correct answer varies depending on your location. Generally, the British say "in," Americans "on."
correct
neither is correct, because eight and five equals thirteen!
The correct way to say it is eighty and four hundred fifty three thousandths.
13.0833
It is correct, but you could also say:These daysNowadaysIn this day and age
It is correct to say "such an exhausting day", and not 'Such an exhaustive day'.
The word todays is the plural form for the noun today. Example sentence: All of our todays are now yesterdays. The possessive form is today's. Example sentences: Today's plan is for lunch and a movie. Today's date is the twentieth.
By or at a certain age are both correct, with slightly different meanings. We say by age six when we are thinking of a succession of years; but we say at ten years of age when considering that one time.
It is not correct English to say "somebody has learned something from an early age" due to the use of "has".
No.
He died at the age of 39 as aresult of of Tuberculosis. He actually might of had Cystic Fibrosis. Todays studies say he did but we are not sure.
yes it's absolutely correct
Usually 'tomorrow is (my/your/his/her/our/their) day off'.
Wednesday morning, it is correct to say I have not seen him for one day. Wednesday afternoon, or by working day end, it is correct to say I have not seen him for two days
I'm not sure what you mean, but I THINK you mean to say "of the same age", as in "Greg and Sue are of the same age" (meaning that they are as old as each other).
It is correct to day "he divided the cake in half". The alternative is to add a word and say "he divided the cake into halves".