It depends on what you are talking about. So let's do an example!
Let's pretend we are talking about going to the beach. Mary is not here, so I am talking to you about going to the beach.
If I am talking about YOU and Mary going to the beach, I would say, "You and Mary are going to the beach."
If I am talking bout myself and Mary going to the beach, I would say, "Mary and I are going to the beach."
If I am asking you to go the beach with Mary and me, I would say, "Would you like to go to the beach with Mary and me?
A trick is to take out the other person's name (in this case, Mary) and see if it would make sense.
"Ruth and me" is correct if it is the object of the sentence. "Ruth and I" is correct if it is the subject.
Correct: The dog followed Ruth and me. (The dog is the subject; "Ruth and me" is the object.)
Correct: Ruth and I went to the beach.
They might both be wrong.It's definitely "Nancy and", but whether the pronoun is "I" or "me" depends on how you're using it in the sentence. To determine which, forget about Nancy for a second and consider whether you'd say "I" or "me", then use that and put "Nancy and" in front of it again.
Mary and myself?
Mary and Michael
"Your sisters' names are Rose and Mary."
Mary and we. If Mary was not involved you wouldn't say "us" (i.e. "us like to go shopping").
Mary, Tom, Bob, and Terri went to the show.
No, it is incorrect. The correct way to phrase that sentence is this:"Bob and I are going to the game."A simple way to figure it out for yorself is to do this:Ask, if you were going to the game alone, how would you say it?You would say "I am going to the game."You wouldn't say "Me is going to the game." right?So add the name "Bob" into the correct sentence, and you come out with"Bob and I .... are going to the game.(IS changes to ARE if you have more than one person going to the park.)Example 2:Which is correct? "Give the book to Mary or I""Give the book to Mary or ME"So, remove "Mary", and you have left"Give the book to Mary or I""Give the book to Mary or ME"(The correct one is "Mary and ME".)Example 3:"Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or me?"Remove Henry and Laura, and ask which is correct?"Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or I?""Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or me?"Answer the question out loud: "Am I responsible? or "Is ME responsible?""I" is correct here, so the example "me" is incorrect.The sentence should correctly read: "Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or I?"Correction:In example 3, actually ME is correct, not I. Like you said, you remove theother nouns or pronouns and say the sentence with possessive meaning.Correct: Who is responsible for the mistake, me?Incorrect: Who is responsible for the mistake, I?If you were to rephrase it like you did, "Am I responsible?"Then yes, I would be proper, not me.
The correct spelling of the long word from the 1964 musical film Mary Poppins is "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious." (It is spelled out in a song.)(see the related question below)
The correct punctuation is "Ship Queen Mary."
The correct phrasing is "I want to present this award to Mary."
The correct form is "Mary and I" when the pronoun is the subject of a sentence. For example, "Mary and I went to the store."
John and Mary Everest
The correct way to write the sentence is "It was Mary and Andrew." This is because "Mary and Andrew" is a plural subject, but the verb "was" agrees with the singular subject "It."
"Your sisters' names are Rose and Mary."
It is proper to bow to the name of Jesus, not Mary.
The sentence "Is Mary not Happy" is correct grammatically as a question. It defines Mary as the subject and not happy as the object. In the other sentence, though grammatically correct, it could be confusing. Not Mary could be construed as all people but Mary. I would use the first sentence, as it is clearest.
"Here are John and Mary." 'Are' is used because "John and Mary" are plural.
Yes, if they are the subject of the verb: Mary and I have books. No, if they are not the subject of the verb: Give the books to Mary and me. 28ca105a-4d21-45a8-8acb-bdd1b00d31de 1.03.01
Mary and we. If Mary was not involved you wouldn't say "us" (i.e. "us like to go shopping").
Mary is a student who works hard