No.
You probably mean one of the following:
"Former friend of Jane and me" is grammatically correct. In this case, "me" is the correct pronoun to use since it is the object of the preposition "of."
It is grammatically correct - and still wrong! Lose the imagery: A friend will support you no matter what happens to you; or Friendship means loyalty.
No, the sentence is incomplete. It needs additional information to be grammatically correct, such as what happened during lunchtime or where it took place. For example, "Today during lunchtime, I met a friend at a café."
The correct grammar for this sentence is: When did your friend come?
"I am friends with X" is correct."We are friends" and "X and I are friends" are also correct."I am friend with X" is not correct.
Quite simply, yes.
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
The correct sentence is: Me and my best friend are going on a exctotic trip to hawaii
thats absolutely correct!!!
Not a single friend came to the party makes more sense? Or maybe 'not one friend came to the party. To me it sounds like it could possibly be grammaticallty correct, but you never know.
"Do" is correct for any compound subject joined by "and".
well the correct way is whom but everyone says who.