it really depends on the situation. Correct: My sister and I are going to the movies. Correct: This is a picture of my sister and me. It is easier to determine which one to use if you remove the other "person" from the sentence. Using the previous examples you would never say "Me is going to the movies", or "This is a picture of I."
She and her sister. you take out the additional "and her sister" and the sentence should still stand alone. ex. She and her sister are ugly. or she is ugly. if it is posessive then that is a different story.
Either can be correct depending on context. 'My sister and I' will work where 'I' could be used alone correctly, and 'My sister and me' will work where 'me' can be used alone correctly. For example, "My sister and I am going to ask use answers.com" is correct because "I am going to use answers.com" is correct.
Yes, the noun phrase 'me and her' is grammatically correct.
The pronouns 'me' and 'her' are objective personal pronouns, which function as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Examples:
Marvin invited me and her to lunch. (direct object of the verb 'invited')
Marvin sent me and her some flowers. (indirect object of the verb 'sent')
Marvin is the brother of me and her. (object of the preposition 'of')
Note: The term 'me and her' is correct grammar but it is traditional courtesy for the speaker (me) to put the pronoun last in a pair or group of people named (Marvin invited her and me...)
Yes, that is grammatically correct, as long as you are using them as objects, although it is probably more usual to say "her and her sister". For example, it is correct to say "He dated her sister and her last year." "He dated her and her sister last year" is also correct. If you are using them as subjects, however, you must use "she" instead of "her": "She and her sister both attended Evergreen College." It is incorrect to use "she" as an object or "her" as a subject.
It is not. My sister and I are going to the park is correct. Never put yourself first, in life or in grammar.
Heather and me
No, you say She and her sister
Heather and I
This sentence is grammatically correct.
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.
Grammatically correct, maybe, but idiomatically wrong. We normally say "buy it for me."
no it is not correct to say enjoy your vacations
Ruins is plural so the grammatically correct form is The Ruins of Windsor are
It is grammatically incorrect to say sister and sister. You just say sisters.
It is grammatically correct to say: There is nothing wrong with this machine.It is not grammatically correct to say: Will it is be grammatically correct to say ....The correct way to write that or say that would be: Would it be grammatically correct to say....
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
Neither is grammatically correct.
No. Him and me is correct.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
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.
It is grammatically correct to say , "I am in school today." This is because you are in the building, not at the building.
Yes, it is grammatically correct. The infinitive "to read" is the direct object and "me" is the indirect object.
no
yes
no