No. Use "you." Do not use -self forms except reflexively or for emphatic repetition. For example "Take care of yourself," "You can do it yourself" or " You, yourself, are all you need."
The grammatically correct phrase is "She and her sister." In this case, "she" is the subject pronoun and "her" is the object pronoun. When using two subjects in a compound subject, both pronouns should be in the subject form, so "she" is the correct choice.
That is the correct spelling of "sister" (may be capitalized before the name of a nun).
That is the correct spelling of the informal term "stepmom" (stepmother).
The correct spelling is nephew (the son of a brother or sister).
You change it to When my mother shops for her, my sister is pleased
You have a sister.
Yes it is bad grammar. It should be your sister and I.
Yes, as the subject of a verb: My sister and I have different taste. But not as the object of a verb or a preposition: These are pictures of my sister and me. Yes it is it is like any other thing such as He and I.
The grammatically correct phrase is "She and her sister." In this case, "she" is the subject pronoun and "her" is the object pronoun. When using two subjects in a compound subject, both pronouns should be in the subject form, so "she" is the correct choice.
No, the correct grammar is "He walked past the garden." "Passed" is used as a verb to indicate movement beyond something, while "past" is used as a preposition to indicate movement alongside or beyond something.
The correct answer will be she is a sister of .
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
If it was "please don't bother my sister and ___."It would be me, but if it was "My sister and ___ are going to the movies," it would be I.
The correct phrase is "My sister and I" when used as the subject of a sentence and "My sister and me" when used as the object of a sentence. For example, "My sister and I went to the store" is correct, while "He gave a gift to my sister and me" is also correct.
if your just saying "your sister has a test" then yes. if you but the word 'does' before "does your sister have a test" then that's correct.
Sister is a singular term, not plural, therefore you would say how is your sister, not how are your sister.
Yes, 'It will be I' is correct grammar. The verb 'to be' takes a complement, not an object. Hence: 'Which girl is your sister?' 'That is she.' (Not 'That is her.') 'It was they who stole the money.' (Not 'It was them'.) 'Will it be we who cook dinner?' (Not 'Will it be us?') 'Who will make the opening remarks?' 'It will be I.' (Not 'It will be me.') Having said that, while the above examples are correct grammar, it is much more common in colloquial speech to use the object form of the pronoun (the form shown in brackets above) rather than the complement. To avoid having to make the choice at all, you could recast the sentence. In the above examples, you might end up with: 'Which girl is your sister?' 'That one.' 'They stole the money.' 'Will we cook dinner?' 'Who will make the opening remarks?' 'I will.'