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Is This Sentece Correct

Is this sentence correct/poetic?

It doesn't make sense.

Is this sentence correct?

Yes

Is this sentence correct?

Many financial and emotional struggles came with this immigration journey; nevertheless, it brought numerous opportunities, and the chance to earn a graduate degree at an esteemed university as X University is certainly one of them.

Is this sentence correct?

You sentence is odd, but not necessarily incorrect.
"The business card represents" ? - what are you trying to say?
If the front of the business card is white and the back of the card is dark aqua, then just say that.

Is this sentence grammatically correct?

The first thing to note is the sentence is missing a few words to round out the overall direction of the sense. See the suggested amendment below.The second is the sentence is crying out for splitting into two separate sentences. There are multiple blocks of 'meaningfulness' and they put the original sentence structure in danger of being misinterpreted. If a high-level native English speaker like me could misinterpret, then you do the math it’s going to be hard for the less proficient.Other than that, you should put the thing in more regular English phraseology first — it’s ultimately pointless to fix grammar when the phraseology is ‘problematic.’The original:—“Voters voted in high stake elections that could shift the power within the hardline-controlled Islamic elites by ushering in a reformist comeback or help conservatives tighten their grip on power.”Suggested amendment:—“The balance of power for the Islamic elites and hardliners rides on the high-stakes elections. Voting could usher in a reformist comeback, or potentially help drive the conservatives to tighten their grip on power even further.”There! Recast the thing from another angle, and you could avoid futzing around over ‘help’ vs. ‘helping.’Thanks for the A2A.

Is this sentence correct? "He is rich as rich can be."?

It's idiomatic English, so feel free to use it. Actual idiom: "He is as rich as rich can be."

But, strictly speaking, it's not perfect grammar.

Is this sentence grammatically correct?

It's not a sentence because it doesn't have a subject. A grammatically correct sentence would be:

This is the best acoustic performance you've ever heard. (THIS is the subject of the sentence.)

Which sentence is grammatically correct?

The original question is:Which sentence is grammatically correct?I am married, with two kids.I am married with two kids.I am married and have two kidsWhich one is correct? why?Answer:Sentences 1 and 3 are correct. Sentence 2 is not correct because it implies that you are in a marriage relationship with two children.

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