I need to figure out what is grammatically wrong with each sentence.

1. Our front window was smashed by Henry's myopic closet.
2. Measles are deforming the witches, which maes their cats jumpy.
3. By the end of the third inning, it is obvious and you knew what the outcome is.
4. When I ruffled his hair, that made him quiver.
5. Leopold's mother does not approve of him meddling with Carole.
6. I, like you, am ready to debone any skeleton in my closet.

1. Our front window was smashed by Henry's myopic closet. The closet did the smashing?? http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/modifiers.htm

2. Measles are deforming the witches, which makes their cats jumpy. There is a subject-verb agreement problem here -- "Measles are ... [measles] makes"??? http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/sv_agr.htm

3. By the end of the third inning, it is obvious and you knew what the outcome is. What is "it"? http://www.nipissingu.ca/english/hornbook/proref.htm Scroll down to Vague Use of It ...

4. When I ruffled his hair, that made him quiver. Problem is the word "that" -- what is "that"? Is there any ONE word to which "that" refers? If not, then complete rephrasing is needed.

5. Leopold's mother does not approve of him meddling with Carole. "meddling" is a gerund; therefore, "him" needs to be a possessive form, not a object form. (Broken Link Removed)

6. I, like you, am ready to debone any skeleton in my closet. I'd rather see "like you" put at the beginning of the sentence rather than splitting up the subject and its verb; also I'd question the use of the word "debone."

=)

To summarize, here is what is grammatically wrong with each sentence:

1. Our front window was smashed by Henry's myopic closet. The use of "myopic closet" as the subject is confusing and illogical.

2. Measles are deforming the witches, which makes their cats jumpy. There is a subject-verb agreement problem - "measles" (plural) should be paired with "make" (plural) instead of "makes" (singular).

3. By the end of the third inning, it is obvious and you knew what the outcome is. The use of "it" as a pronoun is vague and unclear.

4. When I ruffled his hair, that made him quiver. The word "that" is used as a pronoun without a clear antecedent.

5. Leopold's mother does not approve of him meddling with Carole. The pronoun "him" should be possessive ("his") to indicate ownership.

6. I, like you, am ready to debone any skeleton in my closet. The placement of "like you" disrupts the subject-verb agreement, and the word "debone" may not be the most appropriate choice of words.

For more detailed explanations and resources on each specific error, you can refer to the provided links.