Yes. "This is she." "You are she." "It was she who asked the question." The word "her" is possessive. "You are her sister." "Her" can also be an object. "I gave her the answer." In this case, though, "she" is the subject. "You are she."
Tough - I saw her. Now what is possessive about that?
No.You are her.
"I saw a girl trying to break into my car today and you are her!"
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You are she will of course delight a certain type of pedant. However, it is hard to imagine circumstances in which either you are she or you are her would actually be used. One is much more like to say something like 'Yes, you are the girl we were talking about'.
"How are you" is a correct sentence.
Yes, this sentence is correct.
You are palpitating. This is a correct sentence.
no it is not a correct sentence.
No, the correct sentence would be "Who is the singing woman?" by adding a question mark at the end. It is asking for the identity of a woman who is singing.
That sentence is grammatically correct.
no_____If the sentence is You do do that (meaning You are in the habit of doing that) the grammar is perfectly correct and the sentence 'does have correct grammar'.
With the exception of not capitalizing the 'y' at the start of the sentence, it is a correct sentence.
"You and him" is correct in a sentence such as, "I sent the tickets to you and him," versus a sentence such as, "You and he should send the tickets to me."
No - the sentence 'Had never been experience' is not a correct sentence.
Yes, the sentence is correct grammatically. The sentence is The frogs were in the water.
Yes, the sentence is correct.