No. A compound subject takes a plural form of the verb. Change is to are. In addition, the definite article " the " should be used with " beat ". Without it, the English is not smooth, but awkward.
I would say "beaten".
You can find it anywhere on the internet.Just type "Beat it lyrics".
If 'I win you' means 'I beat you,' it's grammatically incorrect. If it means 'I win, and the prize is you,' then it's probably correct--although you might want to rephrase it as "If I win, the prize is you."
beat, lyrics, singers voice, and instruments
Just go on to a search engine e.g Google, and type in JLS - Beat Again Lyrics should work :)
bbib bbib
Beat people up is correct in informal speech. Formally, the verb is simply "beat."
The correct idiom for the sentence would be "Martin had the answer on the tip of his tongue but Lucy said it first." This idiom means someone was about to provide an answer but another person beat them to it.
Are you messed up in the head, what are you talking about the person who asked this question is a retart
I like to beat my wife.
London Beat?
The beat and rytham of a song including lyrics.