yes
John challenged Fred to a chess tournament and beat him after three tries.
Marry Warren
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
No, the correct phrasing is "John and I are here." In English, the pronoun "I" should always come last in a list of individuals.
Yes! "She is with me and John." You can test it out by using the sentence with just one of the persons at a time. For instance, "She is with me." is correct. Also, "She is with John." is correct. Therefore "She is with me and John" is also correct. (However it might sound more natural to say "She is with John and me")
The correct phrasing is "John has the towel." "Has" is the auxiliary verb used with third-person singular subjects like "John."
No, although he tries very hard to be.
denying the affair.
No, although he tries very hard to be.
No, it is not correct. The correct form is "contact John or me." Using "me" as the object pronoun is the proper way to phrase it in this context.
"John is requested to bring pie" is grammatically correct.
The family, John and me