1."She says she want to live in a mansion and have a sports car but she never work hard."
2."I can't speak English fluently yet."
3."You may not be able to live your life exactly the way you want but you can at least try your best to make your life better."
4."Why do you waste time on arguing with the people you think are not important?"
5."He will not have his children going to school alone anymore after the child kidnapping that happened recently."
Are they correct?
Yes, I think they mostly correct, with the exception of some changes to the first sentence. Let's see if anyone objects to any of them. One quick comment, though.
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Yes, I think they mostly correct, with the exception of some changes to the first sentence. Let's see if anyone objects to any of them.
One quick comment, though. You could put a comma before the coordinate conjunction when you have two independent clauses on both sides.
"She says she wants to live in a man
1. This is apparently technically okay, but very unusual, with the old-fashioned subjunctive, "...she want to live..." and "...she never work hard.", instead of the more modern, "...she wants to live..." and "...she never works hard." Use the more modern usage.
2. This is okay.
3. This is okay.
4. This is marginally okay. It might be better as "Why do yo