Using “I” is perfectly correct here, as John and I are the people who “are going to eat” – in other words, we are the subjects of the sentence. It would not, however, be correct to say, “John and me are going to eat fish pie at home this evening”.
The correct phrasing is "John has the towel." "Has" is the auxiliary verb used with third-person singular subjects like "John."
Yes! "She is with me and John." You can test it out by using the sentence with just one of the persons at a time. For instance, "She is with me." is correct. Also, "She is with John." is correct. Therefore "She is with me and John" is also correct. (However it might sound more natural to say "She is with John and me")
"John is requested to bring pie" is grammatically correct.
The family, John and me
John's coat is new . The above sentence is correct in grammar and spelling.
MY NAME IS JOHN WAYNE PRENTICE IS correct
John and Mary Everest
It is unknown what you are referring to. Are you asking which statement is grammatically correct?John got shot ORJohn was shot?Think about it. Was is a verb and the sentence 'John was shot' is much more grammatically correct than 'John got shot' which sounds informal and can have multiple meanings.
John and you bought a house
Jean
The correct way to list the author would be "John P. Lewiston" with the last name capitalized.
'Has shown' is the correct form. The past participle of the verb "show" is "shown" when used with "has" as an auxiliary verb.