David and you is correct. Easy way to remember is to make both singular in a sentence. You would say.. David is going to the store. You are going to the store. Not... David is going to the store. Yourself is going to the store. So when you combine the two they must make sense just as you would speak. David and you are going to the store. Hope this helps.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
Yes, Almighty God is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is grammatically correct.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
No, it is not grammatically correct. If you want someone to correct it for you, please can you explain what you are trying to refer to?
"Anton and you" is the correct grammatical construction. "Yourself" should not be used in this context.
Yes, the formal and grammatically correct way of addressing yourself and another person is to put yourself last.
Try, You bought yourself a pair of glasses.Or, you could try the grammatically correct form, You bought a pair of glasses for yourself.
Yes, 'for free', is grammatically correct.
"Not like that" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context.
Yes! That is grammatically correct!
This is not grammatically correct. The correct form is 'you do not know', or the abbreviated 'you don't know'.
'What a drunkard you are' is a grammatically correct English sentence.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
Yes, it is grammatically correct.
Yes, Almighty God is grammatically correct.
Sure. It would also be grammatically correct to write He spoggled his nubbix on the goober. Grammatically correct and meaningful are not the same.