No.
The pronoun 'we' includes 'I/myself' so 'we' cannot be talking to 'myself'.
These sentences are correct
I am talking to myself.
We are talking to ourselves.
No, the sentence is not proper English. It should be "We are talking to ourselves."
No, not if that is the whole sentence. "I was talking to you" is correct as a sentence. It is also correct to use "I were talking to you" as part of a sentence: "If I were talking to you, I would probably say something that I would regret."
No, "Is what" is not a complete sentence in proper English. It is grammatically incorrect and lacks subject-verb agreement. It needs additional context or words to form a complete and coherent sentence.
Yes, it is proper English to start a sentence with the word "oh." This interjection can be used at the beginning of a sentence to express a range of emotions or to call attention to something specific.
Not a proper sentence. The words translate to - is and pretty.
No, a capital "I" is only used when referring to oneself as a pronoun. In the middle of a sentence, "I" should always be in lowercase unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or being used as a proper noun.
yeah that's a proper sentence
No, not if that is the whole sentence. "I was talking to you" is correct as a sentence. It is also correct to use "I were talking to you" as part of a sentence: "If I were talking to you, I would probably say something that I would regret."
You did a proper job of it.
use it in a sentence
Im not sure, but I do not think there is unless people do not have proper grammar...
It is proper English to say thank you for your concern because that goes to show that you acknowledged the person you are talking to
No that would not be proper English. Best by itself in a sentence is correct.
No, "Is what" is not a complete sentence in proper English. It is grammatically incorrect and lacks subject-verb agreement. It needs additional context or words to form a complete and coherent sentence.
Yes.
Yes, the sentence 'Where are you?' is a correct sentence. The three words are a complete thought with a subject, the pronoun 'where', and a verb, 'is'.
In proper English usage you do not end a sentence in a preposition, so at should not end the sentence Where is Jasmine is sufficient.
The sentence "He's surprised me" is fine. If the contraction is expanded, the sentence becomes "He has surprised me".