Him. The reason is that "he" is a subject pronoun. Since your masculine pronoun is not acting as the subject of the sentence, you would not use "he".
Here is the difference in the same sentence:
He and I had dinner with Susan. (Here, "He" is one of the subjects.)
I had dinner with Susan and him. (Here, only "I" am doing the action, so I am the only subject.)
Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
Both can be used, people from the UK tend to use tea and Americans will tend to use dinner. It is merely personal preference, both are correct.
No 'Neither Bill or Susan say that the stove was working'
Desert: sandy placeDessert: snack after dinner
Dinner is the correct spelling of the word which refers to a mealtime."What is for dinner today?"Diner is the correct spelling of the word referring to a café-like restaurant popular in the US, usually at a roadside."The local diner makes great burgers".
dinner sinner inner dinner sinner inner winner winner chicken dinner spinnerthinner and dinnersinnerdinnerspinnerthinnertwinnerthriller
The cast of Dinner with Strangers - 2009 includes: Einar Gunn as Rob Susan Stout as Susan
Suddenly Susan - 1996 Dinner Party 4-13 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:Atp
The actress is Susan Mills.
The actress is Susan Mills.
They're both potentially correct, with slightly different implications.
yes it is correct.
Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "inner" (interior, not outer).
You spelled it correctly: dining
No that is wrong. It should be "Smoke does not bother Susan as much as me". use the same sentence without putting Susan in it and you have the correct answer "Smoke does not bother me" not "Smoke does not bother I"
Susan Mills is the name of the brunette model eating dinner in the Zales commercial.