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Without knowing the content of the lecture, she did not attend the meeting.
It is for people not be able to attend the meeting
Peter And her will go to the meeting this afternoon.
Neither is correct. The personal pronoun 'her' is the objective form and can't be used as a subject of a sentence. The subject pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female is 'she'. The correct sentences are:She and Peter will attend the meeting this afternoon.Peter and she will attend the meeting this afternoon.Example sentences using the pronoun 'her' as the object are:The meeting will be attended by Peter and her.The meeting will be attended by her and Peter.
No
Hmm, let me see. "Will you attend the wedding this afternoon?" "I have to attend an important meeting soon."
I will attend the meeting as soon as I finish this spreadsheet. The hotel assigned a concierge to attend to our needs.
phrase
Yes.
Both "are" requested to attend the meeting.
The pronoun 'I' is the first person subjective; the pronoun 'you' is the second person, subjective or objective. The correct pronouns for the sentence are 'You and I'.Correct: You or I have to attend the meeting.Correct: The meeting is mandatory for you or me.The pronoun me is the first person objective pronoun, used for the object of the verb or object of a preposition.
Attend is already a verb because it is an action. As in "to attend something".Other verbs are attends, attending and attended."I will attend the meeting"."We are attending the party"."They attended the photoshoot".