No. You are omitting the words "it is" as in "It is great to see you and Bob."
Correct grammar is Bob and I but most people use causal grammer and you and Bob is OK.
This is a great fundraiser
It depends on the structure of the entire sentence. For example, "Bill, Bob, and I are going to the grocery store" is correct grammar in that sentence, but "Sandra is going to meet Bill, Bob, and me" is also grammatically correct because of the structure of its sentence. It really all depends upon the context in which the phrase "Bill, Bob, and I" are being put into. == ==
Yes, as the object of a verb or a preposition: I saw Bob; I saw her; I saw Bob and her. Some people think "her and Bob" sounds better, but it is not any more correct. There is nothing wrong grammatically with the construction 'Bob and her' as the object of a verb. Whether it sounds better or worse than 'her and Bob' is a question of usage or taste, not of grammar.
Yes, that is correct grammar.
Yes, 'you were correct' is perfect grammar. An example sentence: You were correct when you said that a tomato is a fruit.
This should say, The next stop will be somewhere in Vasayas, then it will be correct grammar. Written as it is it is not on correct grammar.
No, it is not correct
No, "Is was able to confirmed" is not correct grammar. The correct phrase would be "It was able to be confirmed."
Yes
Absolutely.
No, The correct grammar for this sentence would be, "He finished doing his homework."