Yes, it makes more since than my father and I.
Either one is correct it depends on the situation.
Your father and you can sit in the front seat. My father and I will sit in the back.
The form father's nationality is correct. Example: My father's nationality is French.
No you would say "My father and mother ARE walking"
it doesn't really make sense when you say it like that. "My father and I went to the market," would be a better way to say it.
My father's house. The apostrophe shows that your father is in possession of the house.
It depends on the usage. "The father and son went to the movies together" would be OK, but most of the time you would say "the father and the son" or "the father and his son" to make it more clear.
The form father's nationality is correct. Example: My father's nationality is French.
"What is your father's name" is the correct way to say it.
YES!!!
Yes
Yes. My father is deceased is a polite way to say he is no longer with us.
No you would say "My father and mother ARE walking"
it doesn't really make sense when you say it like that. "My father and I went to the market," would be a better way to say it.
"Was" is the correct usage.
My father's house. The apostrophe shows that your father is in possession of the house.
What is your father is not a correct sentence. The word father is not a what but a who. The correct way to word it would be, who is your father?
The apostrophe in father's name is possessive, as namebelongs to father.
"Father's name" is correct. The apostrophe indicates possession, so "father's name" means the name belonging to the father.