Dan Shanefield is a retired engineer. His biography is at http://homepage.mac.com/shanefield .
Dan Gutman's Babe and Me is 276 pages long.
There are four syllables in dangerously: dan/ger/ous/ly
The correct answer would depend on whether the subjective or objective form of the first personal singular pronoun is required. The context does not make this clear. For example, it would be correct to say, "John gave the ball to Dan and me at the beach." The word 'to' is a preposition, and prepositions take the objective form of the pronoun. I can not, off the top of my head, think of an example of when "Dan and I at the beach" would be correct, unless someone were trying to use poetic language, such as, "Dan and I at the beach raced one another into the water." This example is, frankly, awkward language rather than poetic. However, "Dan and I are at the beach" is correct, since "I" forms part of the subject, and is the subjective form of the pronoun. Sometimes it helps to try the sentence without the compounding element: "John gave the ball to ... me at the beach." "... I am at the beach."
dan sta romana
Depositor Account Number
Daniel J. Shanefield was born in 1930.
Do you mean the one that goes dan dan dan? Cause I think you have too many dans in there.
Dan dan you qing was created in 1983.
a shark dan dan dan
Dan Rather dan ackroyd dan quayle dan marino dan brown Daniel Boone Dierdorff (if brown doesn't work for ya)
Dan Who? There are a lot of people named Dan. Does the Dan you are referring to have a last name?
Dan Majerle goes by Thunder, Dan, and Thunder Dan.
Dan Talbott goes by Dirty Dan/King Dan.
Dan Geroe goes by Dan the Man, and Democratic Dan.
Dan - a - her. Dan, as in man, then the a as it is pronounced in Dan, and her.
a shark dan dan dan
They want EFX by Das EFX