If you are talking about Jim and yourself, you would say "Jim and I" but, if you were talking about two separate individuals, then you would say "you and Jim."
It's "you and John" or "John and you". Either way, but it's you, not yourself.
Both are correct, but "you and John" is more common, probably because "you" is the person being addressed. For example, "We would love to have you and John join us."
"You and John," would be correct.
john and i
Jim and you
john and yourself
No, this is grammatically incorrect. You only use names like Jim or I when they are the subject, not after the verb.These two similar sentences are equally alike and grammatically correct:1. Jim and I will contact you.2. Please contact Jim or me.
Absolutely. This is one of those constructions that looks really strange, but it's correct. Jim has a wife, his wife has a dress, and you do need to show both possessive relationships by the use of both apostrophes.
Dumber is correct according to the normal formation of English comparatives. The frenchified form more dumb may be allowed, but it is stilted.
Lord Jim has 451 pages.
Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.Playing is the correct spelling.
Yes, the pronoun 'I' is the correct subjective form; 'Jim and I' is the subject of the sentence. A correct alternative is 'We are going to the movies.'
should be: Neither Jim nor John completed the project
all answers are correct
No, this is grammatically incorrect. You only use names like Jim or I when they are the subject, not after the verb.These two similar sentences are equally alike and grammatically correct:1. Jim and I will contact you.2. Please contact Jim or me.
You both need Jim and joes address just in case they are in trouble or in case of a emergency and i will be very sorry if you get this wrong
Mad Money
Absolutely. This is one of those constructions that looks really strange, but it's correct. Jim has a wife, his wife has a dress, and you do need to show both possessive relationships by the use of both apostrophes.
Alex Trebec is the correct answer.
Jim and Mark have been friends since first grade.
depends on if your taking about cam timing or ignition timing and what engine.gm Jim
jim crow laws
Unfortunately, no. In this particular instance, Jane is not in the correct sentence structure to "sues" anybody. Instead, Jane should attempt to sue Jim, so as to follow the guidelines of proper grammar.