No, it should be "This is the man of whom I took a picture." Today, in casual language, grammarians are generally flexible about the rule saying you can't end sentences with prepositions, so "This is the man whom I took a picture of" would be okay for informal speech.
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Informally, you could also simply say, "This is the man I took a picture of."
No a correct sentence would be "My dad took a picture of you and him."
Only the first word of the sentence would be capitalized. It should read "Dad took us to visit grandmother's ranch."
There should be a comma between the two independent clauses: "It started to rain, so I took a cab."
"Did not take" is correct.
Yes, the sentence does need an apostrophe. The correct sentence should be: "It took several hours' hard work to repair the damage." The apostrophe is used to show possession or ownership by indicating that the hard work belongs to the hours.
No a correct sentence would be "My dad took a picture of you and him."
No, the sentence is incomplete. It needs additional information to be grammatically correct, such as what happened during lunchtime or where it took place. For example, "Today during lunchtime, I met a friend at a café."
It is grammatically correct, but "You and your husband took..." flows better.
"You took a test" is grammatically correct. "You gave a test" would mean that you were the one administering the test to someone else.
This sentence is not correct. You don't need the 'be' verb was. The dirty boy took a bath. This sentence is past simple. The dirty boy = subject took = verb - past tense of take bath = object
No Did we take your pictures?
Draw me a picture of what you saw.We bought him a picture book.We took a picture of the sunset.
We took a picture of a Coastal Plains with my friend.
Declarative.
I appreciate you taking time out from your busy schedule.
Example sentence - We took the old paint can with us to the hardware store to ensure we purchased the correct paint color again.
The pronoun 'her' is correct. The pronoun 'I' is incorrect as direct object of the verb 'was'. Both pronouns should be the objective case. The correct pronouns are: "It was her and me that took the test." (It was her that took the test. It was me that took the test.) When the verb is a linking verb, the objects of that verb use the subjective pronouns. Example: The test takers were she and I. (test takers = she and I) Although the verb 'was' is often a linking verb, in the example sentence it is not. The subject of the sentence, 'it' does not refer to 'her and me'.