no it isnt, you say you and me
When I went to school we were taught to say “you and I”. “ You and me” was considered poor grammar.
It is proper grammar.
Yes, "you and I" is the proper grammar when the phrase acts as the subject of a sentence. For example, "You and I are going to the store."
It is correct if you use the proper punctuation. For example, it is correct to say, "No, I never told Rick that you lied about where you were Tuesday night."
It is proper grammar to say "one must play aggressively" because "aggressively" is the adverb form of the adjective "aggressive" which modifies the verb "play."
"Convene a scheduled meeting" is the proper grammar. It indicates that you are initiating or calling for a meeting that was planned in advance.
It is proper grammar to say, "I bet you".
What was there is proper grammar.
No. The proper way would be "Wayne and I are together."
"She did not have" is the proper grammar.
The definition of grammar is the way you say some thing and if you say ain't that ain't no proper grammar yall is say'n
This means "Our team always wins when we share". It seems to be proper grammar.
No. It is proper to say someone graduated FROM high school. You can't eliminate "from."
It is proper grammar.
Yes, this is correct.
Not proper grammar, just say it is easier.
It is correct if you use the proper punctuation. For example, it is correct to say, "No, I never told Rick that you lied about where you were Tuesday night."
Not proper grammar, just use other terms to indicate you agree, if you do.