Are these good sentences?

I will accept anything you give me as a present, except for money.

Sara could not choose between her friends, so she chose Lianna as her partner among the strangers.

The teacher told Lianna to sit quietly beside her friend besides fooling around.

Every student was all ready and disinterested to go to Japan for their field trip since they had been there already.

What could be sentence for course and coarse?

The first three sentences are good.

I don't understand your fourth sentence, but you have used the homonyms correctly.

In the woodworking course, we learned that coarse saws have large teeth.

Thanks for the sentence. For the fourth sentence would this work out well

Eric was all ready to go to his best friend's house, he'd been there already a few times before.

These are my other sentences

The personnel's personal diary had gone missing.

David needed to devise to create the device he had dreamt of building one day.

Your fourth sentence is much better.

Your last sentences are good. :-)

Another possibility for coarse/course:

Of course Mom was dismayed by Joe's coarse language.

To determine if these sentences are good or not, we need to assess their grammar, clarity, and coherence. Let's evaluate each sentence individually:

1. "I will accept anything you give me as a present, except for money."
- This sentence is grammatically correct and clear in its meaning. It effectively states that the speaker is open to receiving any gift except money. It is a well-constructed sentence.

2. "Sara could not choose between her friends, so she chose Lianna as her partner among the strangers."
- This sentence is grammatically correct, but the meaning is unclear or confusing. It is unclear who the "strangers" mentioned in the sentence are and why choosing Lianna as a partner addresses Sara's struggle to choose between her friends. The sentence could be rephrased to provide more clarity and coherence.

3. "The teacher told Lianna to sit quietly beside her friend besides fooling around."
- This sentence is grammatically incorrect and lacks clarity. The word "besides" is used incorrectly; it should be replaced with "instead of" or "rather than." Additionally, the use of "beside" makes the sentence illogical as it contradicts the instruction to sit quietly. The sentence can be corrected and clarified by rephrasing it as: "The teacher instructed Lianna to sit quietly next to her friend and not to engage in any disruptive behavior."

4. "Every student was all ready and disinterested to go to Japan for their field trip since they had been there already."
- This sentence contains a grammatical error. The word "disinterested" is used incorrectly; it should be replaced with "uninterested." "Disinterested" means impartial or unbiased, while "uninterested" means not interested or lack of interest. The sentence can be corrected by replacing "disinterested" with "uninterested." Additionally, the phrasing of "every student was all ready" is a bit redundant and could be simplified to "every student was ready." Finally, the sentence could benefit from rephrasing for better clarity: "Every student was ready and uninterested in going to Japan for their field trip since they had already been there before."

Now, let's move on to your question about sentences for "course" and "coarse." Here are examples of sentences for both words:

- Course: "I am taking a chemistry course this semester at university."
- Coarse: "The texture of the sand on the beach was rough and coarse."

Remember, the context and meaning of the sentence will determine which word to use.