One day my dad and his brother - stop me if you've heard this story - started out on a fishing trip.
It depends on the sentence in which you are using it in. Here are some examples of each:'Give my brother and me the corn flakes on the counter.''My brother and I are going camping without corn flakes.'The trick to use each properly is to eliminate the 'my brother and' and just say the sentence with just 'I' or 'me' in the sentence. Here are the repeated sentences without 'my brother and':'Give me the corn flakes on the counter.''I am going camping without corn flakes.'(The reason 'are' was changed to 'am' in the second sentence was because 'are' is plural, and was referring to you and your brother, while 'am' is only referring to you.)As long as the sentence makes sense, as shown in these two sentences, 'my brother and me' or 'my brother and I'are both acceptable wordings.
their
The one that is NOT a sentence fragment and uses correct sentence grammar is:He liked to go fishing.
That depends on the sentence.Does your brother enjoy fishing?Do your parents enjoy fishing?
Adverbial clause, 'where' shows it is an adverbial clause of place
I believe that fishing is used as a noun in there
Verb.
5
I am awfully sure it is you are fishing because of this sentence; "Are you fishing with me or not?" It also is more common
their
Not unless it is the first word of a sentence or part of a title.
Fishing can either be a gerund phrase or a participial depending on how you use it in a sentence. For example, "Fishing is fun." is a sentence in which fishing is used as a gerund. To use fishing as a participial an example would be, "When I go camping I like to use my fishing gear." In the first sentence fishing is used as a noun and in the second fishing is used as an adjective. Gerunds are nouns with -ing and they can be subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicate nominatives, and object of a preposition.