You and your dad went to the store
Yes, it is a correct sentence. The verb 'is moving' indicates that 'February' is a time in the future. The preposition 'in' before the noun 'February' indicates that the move will take place sometime withing that month.
Which of the following are sentence fragments? I. Sarah who works at the CD store. II. She smiled. III. At noon tomorrow. I & III. You're welcome βΊοΈ
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".
Your brother, Malik, and I. Run to the store later. Which of the following correctly rewrites these sentence fragments? I. Your brother, Malik, and I will run to the store later. II. Later, your brother, Malik, and I will run to the store. III. Your brother, Malik, and I. Will run to the store later. I & II only
What if your brother Malik and I run to the store later?
No
"Mrs. Smith went to the store." Or: "She went to the store." Never "Mrs. Smith she went to the store." The subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Smith" - if you also have "she" then you have the subject in there twice (if this will help you to remember that you only need one of these).
It depends on the structure of the entire sentence. For example, "Bill, Bob, and I are going to the grocery store" is correct grammar in that sentence, but "Sandra is going to meet Bill, Bob, and me" is also grammatically correct because of the structure of its sentence. It really all depends upon the context in which the phrase "Bill, Bob, and I" are being put into. == ==
The preposition at is used before an object of the preposition in a sentence. It should not be used at the end of a sentence. Examples: "I was at the store." - Correct (store is the object of the preposition.) "Prepositions should not be used at the end of a sentence." - Correct (end is the object of the preposition that goes with at.) "Where is my phone at?" - Incorrect Instead, one would say, "Where is my phone?"
Yes, it is a correct sentence. The verb 'is moving' indicates that 'February' is a time in the future. The preposition 'in' before the noun 'February' indicates that the move will take place sometime withing that month.
Use "you and I" as the subject of a sentence and "you and me" as the object. For example, "You and I should go to the store" is correct because "you and I" are the subjects performing the action. "Can you give the book to you and me?" is correct because "you and me" are the objects of the verb.
Not exactly. It is an example of very colloquial, vaguely ethnic dialect.
Which of the following are sentence fragments? I. Sarah who works at the CD store. II. She smiled. III. At noon tomorrow. I & III. You're welcome βΊοΈ
Yes, the sentence contains a dangling modifier. To correct it, you could say: "Arriving ten minutes late, I found that the store was closed for the night."
Yes, it is a correct sentence. The verb 'is moving' indicates that 'February 2008' is a time in the future. The preposition 'in' before the noun 'February 2008' indicates that the move will take place sometime within that month.
Correct: "Go visit your nearest grocery store." Incorrect: You're is a contraction, meaning you are. It would be the same as saying, "Go visit you are nearest grocery store."
Between her and him :) "he" and "she" (along with I) are nominative case pronouns. They are the subject of a sentence : She went to the store. He was late. I guess so. "Him","her", and "me" are not. I'm not sure in English what the correct term is for words that are used with prepositions, but when you use words like "to", "from", "in", "on", "with", "between", "by" etc, they you would use "him", "her" and "me". So SHE gave it TO HIM. HE found HER. If it would be "her" then it would be "him and her" or "her and me". Whatever would be the case in the singular would also be the case in the plural. "He gave it to me and him". You wouldn't say "between I and the doorpost". Whenever you would say "I", you would also say "he" or "she", and whenever you would say "me", you would say "him" and "her".