death
yes
"What your husband has" is correct.
The correct sentence is "My husband is more essential than I." This is because "I" is the subject pronoun that corresponds to the subject "my husband."
Definitely, yes.
The form 'allow your husband and me' is correct. The pronoun 'me' is part of the compound object of the verb 'allow'. Example: If you allow your husband and me a little more time we can finish. Other correct examples are using 'your husband and me' as the object of a preposition: ... for your husband and me ... ... from your husband and me ... ... by your husband and me ... ... near your husband and me ... ... to your husband and me ... An easy way to figure out whether I or ME is correct is to remove "your husband" from the sentence. Try it with just I or ME. You should be able to figure out which one is right. Then, add "your husband" back in. Adding "your husband" does not change whether I or ME is correct. Be aware, that the custom is to list yourself last. You should say: Your husband and I, Your husband and me. You should not say: I and your husband. Me and your husband.
Depends on culture. In Islam, 4 months 10 days.
Etiquette is a thing of the past but it would be husband driving wife in passenger seat and son in back
It is etiquette to put the wife's name first and inside the card put her name first and then the husbands (the deceased was his mother-in-law) so he should be included.
The pronoun I may never be used as the object of a verb or a preposition: This is a photo of ( my husband and) me.The rule is to ignore the 'my husband' bit and imagine you were talking about yourself. So you would say "This is a photo of me" and not "This is a photo of I"so the correct sentence is "This is a photo of my husband and me"
The narrator is Nick Carraway; Daisy's cousin, a friend of her husband Tom and the next door neighbour of Jay Gatsby.
How about this: The vase was a gift to your husband and you from the mayor.
The correct sentence is, "Do she and her husband travel?" because the number of people is plural, as in "Do they travel?"