Technically, no. In formal writing, Is this she is correct. Is this her is, however, normal and therefore correct informal spoken English.
Technically: she is a subject pronoun and is notused in the object position. Her is an object pronoun and is not used in the subject position
Is this her? = correct
"That is she" is grammatically perfect, but unusual these days in all but formal writing.
If the question asked is, " Is that Rosemary ?", "Yes, that is her," or "Yes, she is Rosemary," are the appropriate answers in the positive.
The most common modern use is the object pronoun "her", and the usual way to avoid this choice is to make the pronoun the subject, not the object.
Example : "The person responsible was her."
Example : "She was the person responsible."
No!
"Did you" suggests this is going to be a question but there is no questionning in this phrase.
It should also be "wish" rather than wished i think but it depends what you're going to say next.
What is it you're trying to say?
No.
Did she come to the office?
use the because you are referring to a specific office that both the person asking the question and the person being asked know about.
Add a question mark.
Yes, 'who is it?' is correct.
No. "She and I are friends."
She and I are friends.
The sentence "I have many friends." is a correct sentence. An alternate would be, "I have a lot of friends".
Yes, it is grammatically correct because both she and i are subject pronouns. However, it is customary to say "You and she are good friends" rather than "She and you." In general, the order is (you) (he/she/they/it) (I/we).
The correct sentence is: The girls who I am friends with.The relative pronoun 'who' is a subject pronoun, functioning as the subject of the relative clause.To use the object pronoun 'whom', you must place the preposition 'with' before the pronoun, 'The girls with whom I am friends.', making the pronoun 'whom' the object of the preposition 'with'.
The correct spelling is me.An example sentence is "my friends keep teasing me about how to spell me".
"I am friends with X" is correct."We are friends" and "X and I are friends" are also correct."I am friend with X" is not correct.
The sentence "I have many friends." is a correct sentence. An alternate would be, "I have a lot of friends".
"Can we be friends," "Can you and he be friends"
Neither friends and company or friends and events are correct sentences.
Yes, the sentence is correct grammatically. It conveys the idea that the person being spoken to received a scolding or reprimand from their friends.
Yes, the verb "like" agrees with the subject "three of my friends" because "friends" is plural and "like" is the appropriate plural form of the verb.
The correct phrasing would be "She and Aaron love to cook brunch for friends every Sunday." "Her" is a possessive pronoun, while "she" is the subject pronoun needed to begin a sentence.
Yes. Removing Aaron from the sentence helps with choosing the correct pronoun. "She loves to cook brunch for friends every Saturday."
No it is not a good sentence would be Movement is what my friends and i enjoy.
'Mr Ram, accompanied by his friends, was assembled at the lawn' would be grammatically correct.
No, if "etc." is at the end of a sentence in parentheses, you only need one period. The period in "etc." serves as the punctuation for the abbreviation, and there is no need for an additional period to end the sentence.
Two of our friends are famous musicians.
Yes, it is grammatically correct because both she and i are subject pronouns. However, it is customary to say "You and she are good friends" rather than "She and you." In general, the order is (you) (he/she/they/it) (I/we).