No. The first person pronoun is the object of the preposition "with" and uses the objective case:
"Thank you for meeting with Robert and me."
It is much more obvious if you remove the words "Robert and."
This is a correct sentence: "At the next stockholders meeting we will discuss benefits for employees and dividends for shareholders."
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Almost. It would be correct of you to say "I look forward to seeing you all soon," changing the verb "see" into its gerund form, "seeing."
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
Neither is correct. The personal pronoun 'her' is the objective form and can't be used as a subject of a sentence. The subject pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female is 'she'. The correct sentences are:She and Peter will attend the meeting this afternoon.Peter and she will attend the meeting this afternoon.Example sentences using the pronoun 'her' as the object are:The meeting will be attended by Peter and her.The meeting will be attended by her and Peter.
The correct formation of this sentence will be: "This meeting is of utmost importance."
not
No, it is not.
This is a correct sentence: "At the next stockholders meeting we will discuss benefits for employees and dividends for shareholders."
appositive
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Almost. It would be correct of you to say "I look forward to seeing you all soon," changing the verb "see" into its gerund form, "seeing."
Yes, it is perfectly valid.
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
Yes, except that "meeting" is misspelled.
Yes. Example sentence: The president presided over the meeting.
In contemporary English, it is indeed correct to say, 'She introduced herself at the first meeting.' The reflexive pronoun, 'herself,' is appropriate in this sentence for emphasis upon the one doing the introducing. Further, it is in fact required by the subject-predicate construction, 'She introduced.'