You and I ... are 2 people. Use " are " for more than one of people, things, or places.
I am ... meaning one person alone. if you have any probs ask Kailey lawrence
Me is correct here.
Depends on the context. If you are saying hypothetically, such as "If he were here right now, then this would be easy," then it would be were. If you are saying that it did in fact happen and is now in the past, you would say something like "If he was here before before, then where is he now?"
The correct phrase is "I came here to study." This construction clearly indicates your purpose for being there, focusing on the action of studying. While "I came here for studying" is grammatically acceptable, it sounds less natural in everyday conversation. Using "to study" is more direct and commonly used.
Here are the main three: Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Fascist Japan.
No accurate count was made but estimates in the millions of bison are considered to be of the correct magnitude
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
the weekend's here
The correct form for this question is, "Did you leave your phone here?" If you are making a statement rather than asking a question, it is correct to say, "You left your phone here."
The more correct way to say this would be "It is humbling to be here". You can, as an alternative, say "I am humbled to be here."
If she were here is the answer. 'If she Were Here' is the correct answer but I guess both can be accepted.
"If only he were here" is grammatically correct. In this case, "were" is used as a subjunctive mood to express a hypothetical situation.
SANTA's HERE
If it's just those four words, then it should be "Who is here today?" If it's part of a longer statement, then either could be correct, depending on if it's plural or singular. "The boys who are here today" "The boy who is here today."
no minutes is plural so is should be are here are the minutes
Me is correct here.
No, "Im" needs an apostrophe: *I'm getting bored here - is this correct?*
The correct phrase is "Here I am." The verb "am" should come before the subject "I" in this particular sentence structure.