The term "Just between you and I" is not a sentence. It is a prepositional phrase.
The pronoun "I" is incorrect. The pronoun "I" is a subject pronoun uses as part of the compound object of the preposition.
The pronoun "you" is correct. The pronoun "you" can function as a subject or an object in a sentence.
The correct prepositional phrase is: Just between youand me...
No, it isn't correct. Since the word between is a preposition, the pronouns that follow it have to be object pronouns -- between you and me.
Nope, the pronoun 'I' is the subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the object pronoun.
The correct phrase is, "Just between you and me..."; because 'you and me' is the object of the preposition 'between'.
Between David and him would be the correct grammar in this case.
"On a train" is correct grammar.
The grammar is correct as it is.
Grammar.
No. The correct grammar is; "Yes, I have a girlfriend."
The correct grammar is "Between you and me."
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
Between David and him would be the correct grammar in this case.
The phrase "you and me" is not grammatically correct in traditional grammar. When referring to the subject of a sentence, it should be "you and I." However, in informal speech or certain contexts, "you and me" is commonly used.
The correct grammar/spelling is in between.
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
It depends on context. For example, in a conversation between two people: Person #1: Those items are not for sale. Person #2: Which are? In that context, it is understood that "Which are?" means "Which items are for sale?"
The correct grammar is "you have just been." This structure follows the typical order of subject (you) + auxiliary verb (have) + adverb (just) + main verb (been).
A context-free grammar can generate languages that regular grammars cannot, as it allows for the use of non-terminal symbols in productions. Regular grammars, on the other hand, are less powerful and can only generate regular languages, which are a subset of context-free languages. Context-free grammars are more expressive and have more flexibility in rule definitions compared to regular grammars.
Yes. "The car that just passed was theirs" is grammatically correct.
No, it is correct grammar, not a correct grammar.
"On a train" is correct grammar.