You are perfectly free to begin a sentence with the pronoun you.
No, that sentence is not correct. "Her" should be "She". Remove Aaron from the sentence. "Her loves to cook brunch for friends every Sunday." doesn't make much sense.
Using the correct capitalization and a more appropriate relative pronoun will make it a correct sentence:'She called me while I was there'
The correct pronoun is she, part of the compound subject; a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female.Unless, of course, it was a male that was trying to figure out the task with Robert.
Yes, the pronoun "I" in the sentence is correct.The pronoun "I" is functioning as the predicate nominative following the linking verb "was".A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject or restates the subject.A pronoun used as a predicate nominative is in the nominative (subjective) case.
The pronoun 'her' is correct. The pronoun 'I' is incorrect as direct object of the verb 'was'. Both pronouns should be the objective case. The correct pronouns are: "It was her and me that took the test." (It was her that took the test. It was me that took the test.) When the verb is a linking verb, the objects of that verb use the subjective pronouns. Example: The test takers were she and I. (test takers = she and I) Although the verb 'was' is often a linking verb, in the example sentence it is not. The subject of the sentence, 'it' does not refer to 'her and me'.
Any word that may begin a sentence may begin a paragraph.
No, that sentence is not correct. "Her" should be "She". Remove Aaron from the sentence. "Her loves to cook brunch for friends every Sunday." doesn't make much sense.
Using the correct capitalization and a more appropriate relative pronoun will make it a correct sentence:'She called me while I was there'
No, it is not correct. The first person pronoun 'me' is an object pronoun used for the subject of the sentence. The first person subject pronoun is 'I'. It is also customary to put the first person pronoun last in a compound subject or object. The correct sentence is: "She and I are family." An example of a compound object of a sentence: "The family invited her and me.
Yes, the pronoun 'I' is the correct subjective form; 'Jim and I' is the subject of the sentence. A correct alternative is 'We are going to the movies.'
There is one pronoun is the sentence: youThe pronoun you is functioning as the object of the preposition with.The pronoun you is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun (name) for the person spoken to.The pronoun you can be singular or plural.
The pronoun in the sentence is "she".The pronoun case of the personal pronoun "she" is subjective.The pronoun "she" is an incorrect case for this sentence.The correct sentence is: "Please send an invitation to Bob and her."The reason is because "Bob and her" is the object of the preposition "to".
The correct answer is:C. stands for a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
Yes, "Bill and he" is the compound subject of the sentence. The pronoun "he" is a subjective personal pronoun.
The correct interrogative pronoun is who. (Who is next?)The pronoun 'who' functions as a subject in a sentence.The pronoun 'whom' functions as an object in a sentence.
The correct pronoun is she, part of the compound subject; a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female.Unless, of course, it was a male that was trying to figure out the task with Robert.
No. The predicate of the sentence is objective and, therefore, the correct pronoun would be 'me'.