It could if it is used in certain ways.
Like this...Well, Harry went to the market so he isn't here right now.
Or this....Well, Harry, she just left the house so maybe you can come back later.
With the exception of not capitalizing the 'y' at the start of the sentence, it is a correct sentence.
Of course you can.
To start with ME, not myself.
When he started Hogwarts.
A correct answer would be yes.
The verbs love and start do not agree, since they express actions that happened at different times; replacing start with started would fix the sentence.
He's bit the apple. This is a correct sentence (don't forget to start a sentence with a capitol letter).
The correct sentence form is: Abby whispered, "The movie is about to start."
The correct punctuation for the sentence "In September you and him get to start going to middle school" would be: "In September, you and he get to start going to middle school."
She started the Harry Potter series in 1990.
The correct way to start a sentence with a number is to spell it out... For example... 'Three people were injured' is correct while '3 people were injured' is not.
The correct form is Robert and I. Myself and Robert is incorrect.