I met my friend at the park yesterday.
"You once met the prime minister." is a correct sentence.
Ok - this is quite an easy one to remember. You use 'who' when the people that you are talking about are the object of your sentence and "whom' when they are the subject of your sentence. If you get confused, you can use a simple trick... If you can put HE or SHE in the place of who/whom, then you should use...WHO. Example: Bill, who was the boss of the company. He was the boss of the company. So, WHO is correct. If the sentence only makes sense with HIM or HER, then use WHOM. Example: John, whom she met at school. If you put HE in this type of sentence it looks silly...She met HE at school. So, it must be....She met HIM at school...so use WHOM.
"You can see a lot of art at the Met."
when we were at the pool, i met the mayor
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
The infinitive phrase plays the role of an adverb in this sentence. It tells why you met at the park. In the sentence "You met at the park to run", "to run" is the infinitive phrase.
The meat locker was cold and met the requirements. He put his books in his school locker and went to the football game.
there is no answer because meted is not a word it's just met, here's a sentence: i met a hot guy at the supermarket
i met a famous celebrity.
does this sentences makes sense, Have we met before.
"Met" is the past tense of "meet." Here's an example sentence: "I met my friend for lunch yesterday."
met many different people in his travels