The pronoun that completes the sentence is an objective pronoun, object of the preposition 'except'.
Examples:
Everyone was here except Peggy and me.
Everyone was here except Peggy and you.
Everyone was here except Peggy and us.
Everyone was here except Peggy and him.
Everyone was here except Peggy and her.
Everyone was here except Peggy and them.
Yes, I can Everyone went to The Cancun except for Todd and I. Hope this helps!
No. The linking verb "were" is incorrect. The subject is "everyone" and the proper form of the verb (to be) is "was." The phrase except you does not change the predicate."Everyone except you was invited to the party."Or more usually "Everyone but you was invited to the party."
Yes it is correct - except for your failure to capitalize the pronoun I.
No, the pronouns 'she' and 'I' are subject pronouns used as the object of the preposition 'between'.The first use of the subject pronoun 'she' is correct as the subject of the clause (I hope she will keep...) even though it follows the verb 'hope'.The correct sentence is, "I hope she will keep this between her and me." The pronouns 'her' and 'me' are object pronouns needed as the object of the preposition 'between'.Or, to simplify, "I hope she will keep this between us."The pronoun 'us' is the plural, object pronoun.
No it is not correct if English is related. The correct one would be, Everything except peter is rich.
Except means everything but that one," Everyone ate except Mark." Acccept means to take, " MarK will accept his award at the assembly."
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be: "I will take notes at the meeting." Remember to capitalize the first letter of the sentence and add a space after the period.
A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."
Yes, you can start a sentence with the word "except," but it is typically used in a more informal or conversational context. In such cases, "except" usually introduces a clause that clarifies or contrasts with the previous statement. For example, "Except for the rain, it was a perfect day." However, it's important to ensure that the sentence remains clear and grammatically correct.
Carriage is 250 on all orders, except for export, where carriage is charged at cost.
The word that receives the action of a verb is the objectof the sentence. The pronoun is called an objective pronoun; some pronouns can perform the job of the subject or the object of a sentence, and some are exclusively a subject or object pronoun.Subject pronouns: I, we, my, he, she, they.Object pronouns: me, us, him, her, them.Pronouns that can be the subject or the object of the sentence: you, your, it, its, their.
I think most grammar books will tell you whom is more or less obsolete as a relative pronoun. Both who and that are ok for people except if you refer to a name:He is the guy that I met at the restaurant.I spoke to Jon, who owns the taxi.