Meet with Scott and I
Go is verb Scott is noun, so is James
His could refer to Scott or Jim.
The subject of the sentence is "you." It refers to the person being addressed who is being instructed to invite Keisha and Scott to see the play. The verb in the sentence is "should invite," which indicates the action that the subject is expected to perform.
First, let's clear up the common mistake of using 'me' or 'I'. Think of it like this, you wouldn't say "thank you for visiting with I this morning", you would use 'me' instead of 'I'. So, if you're including another person/name to that sentence, the correct way to say it would be "thank you for visiting with Scott and me this morning". Now the reason why you don't put 'me' before the other persons name has to do with etiquette. It is "more polite" to mention the other person first in the sentence...
The simplest sentence consists of only a subject and a predicate (a noun and a verb) and is only one clause."Scott ran." is an example of such a sentence. It has one noun (Scott), one verb (ran), and is an independent clause (it stands alone as a sentence).A slightly more complex sentence can have two clauses as is evidenced by the following modification to the earlier example:"Scott ran, and he made it in time." The original sentence now contains two clauses (an independent one and a subordinate one).In general, though, "simple sentence" usually refers to a sentence with only one clause.
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
I can't see why there would be a relationship. Grammatically correct sentences can be short or long. In his novels Sir Walter Scott sometimes had sentences a page or ever more in length, and his grammar was excellent!
Announced is the correct spelling of this word.An example sentence is "Scott announced the correct spelling of the word".
"For Scott and me" is correct. "For Scott and I" is incorrect.The easiest way to remember is to substitute "us" or "we" for the longer version. For example, you would say "from us," so you say "from Scott and me," but you would say "Weare going to the store," so you say "Scott and I are going to the store."If you could shorten the group of people to "us," then you use me, him, her, them, etc.If you could shorten the group of people to "we," then you use I, he, she, they, etc.
Yes, the sentence is correct.To help identify that you are using the correct pronoun in a compound subject or object, try the sentence with only the pronoun as the subject or object. Example:Thank you for making time for me. (object of the preposition 'for' takes the objective form 'me')
Yes
Scott A. Schwenter has written: 'Pragmatics of conditional marking' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Conditionals, Grammar, Comparative and general, Implication (Logic), Pragmatics, Semantics
Scottforesman.com
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's new electronic game."
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's video game."
Tony Scott
The active voice sentence is: 1 The tornado warning at Scott AFB scared you. The passive equivalent is: 2 You were scared by the tornado warning at Scott AFB. Passive voice is often made by using "by" in the sentence, just like this sentence is passive.