Originally posted by WindDancer
Is this a proper sentence?"This cheese stinks very good"
It concurs with the 'subject - verb - adverb - adjective' structure of grammatical correctness, so despite being almost oxymoronic and a little sonically clumsy, it is of sound grammatic structure and therefore a 'proper sentence'.
First of all, either of the original sentences is gramatically inept. 'Number' is being misued as a noun.
"This cheese stinks very good"
Clumsy and a bad use of 'good' and only possibly legal at all because of the exeption rule of 'good' with human senses, and in fact by using a pejorative verb you pretty much rule out the legal use of 'good'. Best avoided.
"A. Where are you studying?
B. What school do you go to?"
Define difference? I mean, there is an obvious difference that the second is only asking about a school, which you might well be a janitor at and need not be studying, whereas the first asks where you are studying, which need not be a school at all.
Although most people think of study as in "I'm studying for a test", study can also mean to learn. Since the school is the place of learning, then one would think "I study at (for example) Harvard" the same as "I go to Harvard University".
In short, they are the same.
As for your original question, I would personally use the "on" with the "will be a song". But either is correct.