Me and some friends were going to the movies
yes e.g. "Along with David I was against it."
One *can* begin a sentence with "with," and contrary to popular belief, can even finish a sentence with it, but only in certain contexts. ie "With that in mind, ...." "With all due respect, ....." "With whom are you going?" (Which is admittedly a bit old-fashioned.) "With what?" (in response to a statement) and the classic "With this ring, I thee wed." Which is anachronistic, but still correct.
Yogi, Yasser, Young, Yuri and Yam are boy names. Yasmin, Yelena, Yoko, Yon, Yoshie, Yuette, Yolande, Yolanda and Yon are girl names.
The population of Dompierre-sur-Yon is 3,869.
In Japanese, yon is "four". It mostly is 'four' unless the context of the sentence changes its meaning. Don't worry so much about it though. It means "four".
Yes; 四 is the Japanese for '4' and it reads both 'yon' and 'shi'. You will hear it in making bigger numbers too, example:Juu = 10 , Yon = 4Juu Yon = 14Yon Juu = 40Yon Juu Yon = 44
Yes. There is no word that cannot begin an English sentence.
Yes, you can begin a sentence with the acronym "NASA."
That woman
Yon Garcia was born in 1979.
Yon Goicoechea was born in 1984.
Tom A. Yon was born in 1882.