Both sentences are correct.
My mom plus my dad equaled me.
I need to add quotation marks in that sentence
dad add
Tess, Tess's mom, Rob, Sammy, Miranda, and Tess's dad
It is plotte on the x-axis. I dad the same question in science.
the sentence given is incorrect. Dad has brought presents for you and for her.
No, it should read "Dad brought presents for her and I."
'Do your Mom and Dad enjoy good health?' is the correct sentence.="h2headingh1"style="color:rgb(0,0,0);"name="'do_your_mom_and_dad_enjoy_good_health?'_would_be_the_correct_sentence.">
The sentence "are you going with dad and I" is not correct. It should be "are you going with dad and me" since "me" is the correct pronoun to use in this case.
No a correct sentence would be "My dad took a picture of you and him."
dad bats now
My dad was the cook in our house.My dad could cook very well.
You and your dad went to the store
It should be: My mom and dad call me A ndrea.
Dad and him........................... I venture that "he" is part of the subject of the sentence. Thus, it should be "he" rather than "him". Conversely, I would say that "Dad and he went rafting." would be wrong, and that it should be "He and Dad went rafting."… but I could not say why definitely. I am thinking that you should put "he" first because it is a pronoun that refers back, and putting "Dad" before it would be confusing. --------- It should be "Dad and he" went rafting, not "him". As to the order, we tend to put pronouns in front because they're old information, by definition, and older comes before newer. BUT that is only a tendency and one that yields to the actual context of the sentence. Are you talking mostly about "him" or mostly about "Dad", for instance. Either order is grammatically correct.
To go
The correct word is "me." Here's why. We use "I" only for the subject of a sentence. Dad and I hope you do well in school. He and I will visit you next month. But if you are using an object, the correct word is "me." The rule is that whenever the sentence has a preposition (for, between, with, among, to, at), you have what is called a "prepositional phrase," and it always takes an object (not a subject). In this sentence, you have the word "for" and so... It's been fun for your Dad and me...