Answer:
The group of words is a phrase and is missing a verb; it cannot stand alone as a sentence.
Explanation:
"Planning on getting married for over a year" is not a sentence.<u> It doesn't have a subject </u>and is missing a "helping verb." It is a phrase because it doesn't have a complete thought.
It is the helping verb that helps the main verb "planning" in order to describe whether the action is happening in the<em> past, present or future.</em>
Examples of helping verbs:<em> is, are, was, were, been, have, had, has</em>.
To make the example into a sentence, you may say:
"She's been planning on getting married for over a year."
Taught is in past tense, when you say he taught it means he has already done it
Answer:
"Beatles' drummer, Richard Starkey, was born in Liverpool, England, so he is known to the world as Ringo Starr", has a clear and concrete writing error. Thus, the word "so" has no reason to be in said wording, as the fact that Richard Starkey was born in Liverpool is in no way a condition for the world to know him as Ringo Starr. In other words, the word "so" as a connector within the sentence does not follow logical parameters, as it does not deal with a cause-consequence situation.