Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
The correct pronoun is their. Sarah Ann and Tamara want dessert before their dinner.
Him. The reason is that "he" is a subject pronoun. Since your masculine pronoun is not acting as the subject of the sentence, you would not use "he".Here is the difference in the same sentence:He and I had dinner with Susan. (Here, "He" is one of the subjects.)I had dinner with Susan and him. (Here, only "I" am doing the action, so I am the only subject.)
I was supposed to go home. I did, however, wait until dinner had finished. It was a good decision, because after dinner, we enjoyed an excellent dessert!
Example sentence - He wanted dessert after he ate his dinner.
compound
The correct sentence is "he has had" as it is the present perfect tense of the verb "to have." The use of "have had" would be incorrect in this context.
No. It would have to be changed to "You were treated to a great dinner."
yes it is correct.
you have not to go swimming after a big dinner.
this sentecs is correct ? The bakery isnext the dinner.
If you capitalize the I the yes. It would be: I had children cooking dinner.
To correct the sentence, you could say: "We stopped to use the bathroom, stretch, and eat dinner." Make sure to add commas after each activity to separate them properly.
My family and I is correct before a verb. (nominative case) My family and me is correct after a verb or preposition. (objective case) When deciding on whether to use "I" or "me" in a sentence, you take out the other person(s) and see what would be used. For example, if you were to say "My family and I went to dinner," you take out family and it would read "I went to dinner." "Me went to dinner" doesn't sound right. However, if you were to say "John wanted to go to dinner with my family and I," and take out family, you would be saying "John wanted to go to dinner with I." "I" does not fit here and is grammatically incorrect. The sentence should read "John wants to go to dinner with my family and me." You can do this with any personal pronoun such as we/us, he/him, she/her, or they/them. "She and I went to town." = She went to town. OR I went to town.
My family and I is correct before a verb. (nominative case) My family and me is correct after a verb or preposition. (objective case) When deciding on whether to use "I" or "me" in a sentence, you take out the other person(s) and see what would be used. For example, if you were to say "My family and I went to dinner," you take out family and it would read "I went to dinner." "Me went to dinner" doesn't sound right. However, if you were to say "John wanted to go to dinner with my family and I," and take out family, you would be saying "John wanted to go to dinner with I." "I" does not fit here and is grammatically incorrect. The sentence should read "John wants to go to dinner with my family and me." You can do this with any personal pronoun such as we/us, he/him, she/her, or they/them. "She and I went to town." = She went to town. OR I went to town.
My family and I is correct before a verb. (nominative case) My family and me is correct after a verb or preposition. (objective case) When deciding on whether to use "I" or "me" in a sentence, you take out the other person(s) and see what would be used. For example, if you were to say "My family and I went to dinner," you take out family and it would read "I went to dinner." "Me went to dinner" doesn't sound right. However, if you were to say "John wanted to go to dinner with my family and I," and take out family, you would be saying "John wanted to go to dinner with I." "I" does not fit here and is grammatically incorrect. The sentence should read "John wants to go to dinner with my family and me." You can do this with any personal pronoun such as we/us, he/him, she/her, or they/them. "She and I went to town." = She went to town. OR I went to town.
The sentence, "After Joan extended a dinner invitation to Glen he reciprocated by inviting her to a concert" is correct, except that traditionally in the U. S. at least there should be a comma after "Glen", to set off an initial adverbial clause. In England, fewer commas of this kind tend to be used.
A correct way to use "Indian" in a sentence could be: "I am going to an Indian restaurant for dinner tonight."