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Everybody have there own charisma on people and things.

Certain families have bipartisan in there family.


When is comes to election time they canvass every vote twice or more.


The school board caucus at the school for a meeting.

2006-11-03 11:16:22 · 10 answers · asked by BUNNY 2 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

can you give me a website?? did i spell this right??

2006-11-03 16:50:04 · update #1

10 answers

Are these sentences correct?
Everyone has their own charisma on people and things. (The use of "their" has become common, though you can use his/her.) I'm not so sure about "on people and things." This would require some previous reference to that phrase in order to make sense.
Certain families have bipartisan members. (Bipartisans is not a word.)
At election time, they canvass every vote at least twice.
The school board caucuses (or caucused). (A caucus is a meeting.)

2006-11-03 11:27:23 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I can tell this is for some type of vocabulary thing, since the reason why these sentences don't make sense is because of the certain words such as charisma, bipartisan, canvass, and caucus. Here are correct sentences to understand the meanings of the words correctly....

Everybody have there own charisma on people and things.
NO... It should say.. "Every politician has a certain charisma about themselves which make citizens want to vote for them."

Certain families have bipartisan in there family.
No... It should say something like... "Government leaders hope to achieve a bipartisan foreign policy. "

When is comes to election time they canvass every vote twice or more.
"Politicians canvass their opinions to the public in order to gain supporters."

The school board caucus at the school for a meeting.
"The caucus selected candidates from each party to run in the upcoming election."

2006-11-03 11:30:34 · answer #2 · answered by GeniusDUH 3 · 0 0

Every sentence has errors.
Everybody has his/her own charisma.
Certain families have both Republicans and Democrats in them.
At election time, every vote is canvassed at least twice.
The school board caucused last night.

2006-11-03 11:21:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ALL OF THEM ARE WRONG!!!
Everybody has their own charisma.
Certain families have both Republicans and Democrats in them.
when it is election time, every vote is canvassed at least twice.
The school board caucused for a meeting.
ps. ur question is wrong 2. (are these sentences correct)

2006-11-03 13:42:02 · answer #4 · answered by vk 2 · 0 1

Everybody has.
When it comes election time, they canvass every vote at least twice.

2006-11-03 11:23:40 · answer #5 · answered by shafferboston34 1 · 0 0

The second one is run on sentence. Don't know for sure if inserting perhaps would work with comma or semicolon. my guess is semicolon, but only guess. The first one could be worded in better manner.

2006-11-03 11:37:03 · answer #6 · answered by Mister2-15-2 7 · 0 0

Every one is wrong. There are wrong words, misspelling and words used improperly. They almost look like malapropisms. Which reminds me that I should sometime read that play.

2006-11-03 11:21:01 · answer #7 · answered by St N 7 · 0 0

None of them are, including your question.

2006-11-03 11:19:53 · answer #8 · answered by Guppie 2 · 1 0

no, none of them are correct

2006-11-03 13:43:25 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No

2006-11-03 12:25:41 · answer #10 · answered by bugged 3 · 0 0

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