No, it should be 'the party is hosted by David and me'
1. The first person (me or I) is always listed last, so always David and I or David and me
2. If you want to check whether you should use 'I' or 'me' take the other person out of the sentence and see if it still makes sense - you wouldn't say 'the party is hosted by I', so it would be equally incorrect to say 'the party is hosted by David and I'
OR better still use change from passive to active voice:
'David and I are hosting the party'
(Note that now it is 'David and I' not 'David and me' as you wouldn't say 'me is hosting the party')
David and you is correct. Easy way to remember is to make both singular in a sentence. You would say.. David is going to the store. You are going to the store. Not... David is going to the store. Yourself is going to the store. So when you combine the two they must make sense just as you would speak. David and you are going to the store. Hope this helps.
No. 'Many' is plural so it is followed by the plural form of the verb. Think of it as 'they': 'Many say that the story of David and Goliath is true'. 'They say that the story ....'
Between David and him would be the correct grammar in this case.
Neither David nor Tomas finished his homework.Using the pronoun 'their' indicates that two people are working on one assignment together.A exception for informal language occurs when a compound antecedent consists of both genders; for example:"Neither David nor Jane finished his or her homework." is grammatically correct but most people would say, "Neither David nor Jane finished their homework."
Since it is a statement that David asked, just treat it as a statement. "David asked if the Week 4 assignment needed to be uploaded to Waypoint."
Both "Stars of David" and "Star of Davids" (no apostrophe) have been used, often a matter of prior or consistent usage. "Stars of David" is grammatically correct.
David and you is correct. Easy way to remember is to make both singular in a sentence. You would say.. David is going to the store. You are going to the store. Not... David is going to the store. Yourself is going to the store. So when you combine the two they must make sense just as you would speak. David and you are going to the store. Hope this helps.
The cast of Urban Dirt Hosted by David Walrod - 2011 includes: David Walrod as Himself - Host
No. 'Many' is plural so it is followed by the plural form of the verb. Think of it as 'they': 'Many say that the story of David and Goliath is true'. 'They say that the story ....'
Urban Dirt Hosted by David Walrod - 2011 was released on: USA: 2 November 2011
First of all, your question isn't even grammatically correct. It SHOULD read, "How did Elton John have a son?"And to answer your question, he and his partner, David, had a surrogate carry their son.
David Ruprecht
Skinner ?
David Vine.
DeRay David.
Presuming you mean David Letterman, David never hosted The Tonight Show on NBC. He hosted The Late Show on CBS from 1993 to 2015 & Yes, when he retired, Paul Shaffer & the band left the show as well.
Neither is correct in English. The correct form would be - " David is a fast driver "