The sentence, "They are going to the beach." is correct.
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.
He and i am going to school
Is this correct? Thought you was going to go to Belks tomorrow.
Yes. Best to keep the verb agreement, if possible.
They're is a contraction of "they are". There is a place name substitute. The correct sentence is "They're (they are) going to the store".
I love going to the beach
We planned on going to the beach for the day.
Only one sentence is correct. The correct sentence would be "He saw me going there".
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.
no its"Are you going with dad and me" no, the real answer is "are you going with dad and me" not "are you going with dad and I"
Both are correct with ever so slightly different meaning.
What are you going to draw? It is correct.
The gerund/verbal noun "going" and the word beach are nouns. He is a pronoun.
"Steve and I are going" is correct. Use "I" as the subject of a sentence and "me" as the object. In this case, "I" is the subject performing the action of going, so it is the appropriate pronoun to use.
Yes, perfectly correct.
'They are going sightseeing' or 'They are going to go sightseeing' are acceptable forms.
The correct spelling is seashells. An example sentence would be "there are plenty of seashells on the beach".