No. You would say "It was a pleasure to talk to you" or "I enjoyed talking to you."
If you want to be gramatically correct, you should say "ten to one" since "till" is slang but if you are just talking or posting something informal, "ten till one" is fine. I think.
If you are talking about Jim and yourself, you would say "Jim and I" but, if you were talking about two separate individuals, then you would say "you and Jim."
Happy, satisfied, content, pleasured
It depends on what you are talking about. So let's do an example! Let's pretend we are talking about going to the beach. Mary is not here, so I am talking to you about going to the beach. If I am talking about YOU and Mary going to the beach, I would say, "You and Mary are going to the beach." If I am talking bout myself and Mary going to the beach, I would say, "Mary and I are going to the beach." If I am asking you to go the beach with Mary and me, I would say, "Would you like to go to the beach with Mary and me? A trick is to take out the other person's name (in this case, Mary) and see if it would make sense.
If you are talking about only one parent it would be "parent's name" but if you are talking about both parents then it would be "parents' names"correct
No, not if that is the whole sentence. "I was talking to you" is correct as a sentence. It is also correct to use "I were talking to you" as part of a sentence: "If I were talking to you, I would probably say something that I would regret."
Yes, that is a common and polite response in a conversation, acknowledging that the interaction was enjoyable for both parties.
If he gets to the point where he say yeah or I'm cumming then u know
if you are talking about your boss specifically or if you are working with a sole employer you say employed by. If you are talking about a business as a whole you say employed at.
no it isn' t
If you are talking about the ill, Enfermo in the correct word to use.
No. If you are talking about indirect speech then - I asked him when he was born - is correct. If you are asking about direct speech then - "When were you born?" - is correct
Yes, you can say that. Some people think you can and some people think you can't.
If you are talking about two different weddings then it would be correct. If this is one wedding then it is Dan and Katie's wedding.
Pleasured
Ask him.
No! When you show such selfishness even when talking to God, I don't now what to say further