You would say Me and My in proper English. For example, this is me and my brother in the photograph.
You should say "(noun) and I" when referring to yourself and someone else as the subject of a sentence. For example, "My friend and I went to the store." Use "me and (noun)" when you are the object of the sentence, as in "He gave the book to me and my friend."
No, "sit" is not a noun in that context. It is a verb that describes the action of sitting. A noun in that sentence would be "chair," which is the object of the action.
To say "kiss" in Polish, you would say "pocaΕunek."
As a noun it would be 'sabl' or 'du'; as an adjective it would be 'du', 'dudew' or 'tywyll'.
Tumaini UPDATE: Tumaini is Hope (the noun) To hope would be 'tumai'
You would use "a plethora" before the noun, as in "a plethora of options."
It could be either. As a verb you would say "she is bullying him" and as a noun you would say "bullying is bad."
It depends on whether the noun is masculine or feminine. If the noun is masculine, you would say il est grand. If the noun is feminine, you would say elle est grande.
I would say it ¡s not any kind of noun.
i would say its a noun since it is a company
It depends on the noun before the word 'that': There are cats that are evil... That cat is evil. If the noun associated with the word 'that' is plural, you would say 'that are' If the noun is singular, you would say 'that is'
no, i would say noun, like if you said, she is an expert. it would be a noun or a direct object
yes but if you were to say the brand first it would be a proper noun, i think.
as a noun it would be sonrisaas a verb it would be sonreirSonrisasonrisa
It depends on the context, but if you were going to use it as a noun then you would say multa.
The translation of the word "my" from English to French is dependand on the gender of the noun "my" is describing. If the noun is determined to be male, my would be tranlsated to "mon." If the noun is female, the translation would be "ma." If the noun is plural, the translation would be "mes."
You would say, 'the mouse's barbecue'.
The verb as in drinking a liquid would be nomimasu, and the noun would be nomimono