In the sentence, "Henry is the neighbor who...", the proper noun is Henry.
Yes, Henry is a proper noun, a person's name. The name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title is always a proper noun.
We say Henry and I know each other, but Joe introduced Henry and me. "...me and Henry" should be used if this group of words describe the object of the sentence. For example, "He gave it to me." "Me" is on the receiving end of the verb "gave," making it the object of the sentence. When Henry is added, he is still a part of the object. The pronoun "I" is a subject, which performs the verb. "I will go to work," for example, has "I" doing the action. Again, even when Henry is added, the words work together as the subject. If you have trouble deciding which way to write it, remove the proper noun and look at the pronoun alone. Do I want to say, "Me got it in the mail," or "I got it in the mail?" For native English speakers, the correct answer will sound right as well. Then simply add your proper noun to say what you want to say. In this case it is proper to say, "Henry and I got it in the mail," because "Henry and I" are performing the action in the sentence.
Examples of common nouns for the proper noun Henry VIII are:mansonfatherkinghumanhusband, husband, husband...
All answers are correct!!
No, it is incorrect. The correct way to phrase that sentence is this:"Bob and I are going to the game."A simple way to figure it out for yorself is to do this:Ask, if you were going to the game alone, how would you say it?You would say "I am going to the game."You wouldn't say "Me is going to the game." right?So add the name "Bob" into the correct sentence, and you come out with"Bob and I .... are going to the game.(IS changes to ARE if you have more than one person going to the park.)Example 2:Which is correct? "Give the book to Mary or I""Give the book to Mary or ME"So, remove "Mary", and you have left"Give the book to Mary or I""Give the book to Mary or ME"(The correct one is "Mary and ME".)Example 3:"Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or me?"Remove Henry and Laura, and ask which is correct?"Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or I?""Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or me?"Answer the question out loud: "Am I responsible? or "Is ME responsible?""I" is correct here, so the example "me" is incorrect.The sentence should correctly read: "Who is responsible for the mistake, Henry, Laura, or I?"Correction:In example 3, actually ME is correct, not I. Like you said, you remove theother nouns or pronouns and say the sentence with possessive meaning.Correct: Who is responsible for the mistake, me?Incorrect: Who is responsible for the mistake, I?If you were to rephrase it like you did, "Am I responsible?"Then yes, I would be proper, not me.
No. The proper spelling of the name (Henry VIII's second wife) is Anne Boleyn (c. 1501-1536)
Henry Fussy is the boy that Fern becomes fond of in Charlotte's Web.
"Henry" is a proper noun, as it is used to refer to a specific person or entity.
Yes, Henry is a proper noun, a person's name. The name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title is always a proper noun.
The cast of Like a Good Neighbor - 2012 includes: John Henry Whitaker as Nick Dallas James as Tom
That would be Moody Margaret.
The possessive form of the proper noun Henry is Henry's.Example: Henry's party is this Saturday.
Henry has been credited with writing Greensleeves
I think so he did because he liked writing songs
We say Henry and I know each other, but Joe introduced Henry and me. "...me and Henry" should be used if this group of words describe the object of the sentence. For example, "He gave it to me." "Me" is on the receiving end of the verb "gave," making it the object of the sentence. When Henry is added, he is still a part of the object. The pronoun "I" is a subject, which performs the verb. "I will go to work," for example, has "I" doing the action. Again, even when Henry is added, the words work together as the subject. If you have trouble deciding which way to write it, remove the proper noun and look at the pronoun alone. Do I want to say, "Me got it in the mail," or "I got it in the mail?" For native English speakers, the correct answer will sound right as well. Then simply add your proper noun to say what you want to say. In this case it is proper to say, "Henry and I got it in the mail," because "Henry and I" are performing the action in the sentence.
The theme would be saving conker from the next door neighbor Henry Bacon.
The theme would be saving conker from the next door neighbor Henry Bacon.