The ".?" is an artifact of Yahoo! Answers, so I'm not counting it.
(1) "Their" should be "there."
(2) "Sentense" should be "sentence."
(3) There are only 2 things, not 3. That's the third thing.
2007-02-08 07:55:27
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answer #1
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answered by Jay 7
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There are two things wrong with this sentence: 2 misspellings, 1 wrong quantity.
OR
There are three things wrong with this sentence: 2 misspellings, 1 wrong punctuation (if the question mark wasn't inadvertent on your part).
2007-02-08 07:58:22
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answer #2
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answered by Lady Yaz 3
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Their ought to read "there". Sentense should read "sentence", and the full stop or period before the question mark is not needed as the question mark would end the sentence.
2007-02-08 07:53:32
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answer #3
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answered by catfish 4
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There are three things wrong with this sentence.
2007-02-08 07:51:27
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answer #4
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answered by GlamGurl 4
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There are three things wrong with this sentence.
2007-02-08 07:49:47
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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There are three. It should be, There are three things wrong with this sentence.
2007-02-08 09:08:40
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answer #6
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answered by Brittany B 2
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Their
sentense
Three instead of 3???
Or grammar? There are three errors in this sentence...
2007-02-08 07:54:14
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answer #7
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answered by Oh Suhnny Day 3
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There are three things wrong with this sentence.
thier=there
sentense=sentence
?=.
2007-02-08 07:57:25
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answer #8
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answered by Luv Rulz 4
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~'Their' should be 'There'
~'sentense' should be 'sentence'
~'.?' should be '.'
So, overall,
"Their are three things wrong with this sentense.?"
should be:
"There are three things wrong with this sentence."
2007-02-08 07:55:56
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answer #9
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answered by Jeweled_Aqua 2
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i only see 2
2007-02-08 07:51:31
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answer #10
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answered by hersheyfan222 2
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2⤋