There's a right time for each of those.
Traditionally we were taught to put the other person first, so "I" or "me" comes second. But that is a matter of courtesy, not grammar. Grammatically, "me and you" is just as good as "you and me." (And "I and you" is just as good as "you and I," although it would certainly be frowned upon by educated persons.)
But as for when to use "me" and when to use "I"--they have different meanings. Use "I" when you are on the doing end of something--when you are the subject of the verb. Use "me" when you are on the receiving end, the "done-to" side of a verb or a preposition.
The correct is "between you and me".
An easy way to remember it is that you say "between us" and not "between we".
There is a link below to a grammatical explanation of why it is so.
if its the subject "you and I", if its the direct object or in a prepositional phrase, its "you and me"
Evan and I.
It is correct
It is correct to say them both, but it matters on what you want to say.
no it is not correct to say enjoy your vacations
correct !
You should say for your convenience it is *gramatically correct-*just means correct
"Between him and his wife" is correct. You wouldn't say "It's between they". You would say "It's between them". So the objective pronoun (him) is correct and not the subjective pronoun (he).
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "here is a copy of the email between Sally and me" because "me" is the appropriate pronoun in that context as it functions as the object of the preposition "between."
No, it is not correct, it should be hundreds of thousands of people.
The correct phrasing is "between her and him" because "her" is the objective form of the pronoun when serving as the object of the preposition "between."
Between her and him :) "he" and "she" (along with I) are nominative case pronouns. They are the subject of a sentence : She went to the store. He was late. I guess so. "Him","her", and "me" are not. I'm not sure in English what the correct term is for words that are used with prepositions, but when you use words like "to", "from", "in", "on", "with", "between", "by" etc, they you would use "him", "her" and "me". So SHE gave it TO HIM. HE found HER. If it would be "her" then it would be "him and her" or "her and me". Whatever would be the case in the singular would also be the case in the plural. "He gave it to me and him". You wouldn't say "between I and the doorpost". Whenever you would say "I", you would also say "he" or "she", and whenever you would say "me", you would say "him" and "her".
Between "Cathy and me" is correct. "Between" is a preposition, and you use "me" as the object of a preposition. Always try it with another proposition, such as "for," and make it singular. Would you say "for I"? No, you would say "for me." This applies to more than one person, so the proper usage is "for you and me," the same as "for me." This applies to "between" as well.
No, it is not correct. The correct phrasing would be "For the last two years."
Though "correct" and "right" mean the exact same thing, I'd say "correct" is more of what a host on a game show might say, whereas "right" is agreeing with someone or acknowledging their choice.
We are all one. There is no "you" and "me." Rather than say "you and I" it is more correct to say "I and I." "I and I" sometimes just means "I" instead of "we." There is no difference between "I and I"
Yes, it is correct to say a video is 1 hour and 15 minutes long.
Yes, the prepositional phrase 'between him and them' is correct because the pronouns 'him' and 'them' are objective formsfunctioning as the object of the preposition 'between'.Pronouns following prepositions are always in the objective case, the object of the preposition.
"Do you agree" is a question asking for confirmation of agreement on a specific topic. "Are you agree" is grammatically incorrect and should be phrased as "Do you agree" instead.