Bob and I
The correct phrase is "I can see in this picture," as it refers to looking inside or within the picture itself.
Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
The plural of tagging is taggings.
Correct grammar is Bob and I but most people use causal grammer and you and Bob is OK.
Yes. She found is correct, Bob and Bill found is correct so She, Bob and Bill found is correct.
That is the correct spelling of "tagging" (attaching tags). The term is used in the field of animal studies (e.g. ear and fish tags), and in slang, spray-painting graffitti marking a territory.
No, that is not correct English grammar.The correct way to ask is either:"What is this a picture of?""What does this picture show?"
The first thank you is correct.
The correct phrase is "I can see in this picture," as it refers to looking inside or within the picture itself.
Either "I have seen that picture," or "I saw that picture."
I am a friend of Bob. OR I am Bob's friend. Either is correct.
It is correct to say Bob and I
The plural of tagging is taggings.
Please stop tagging me in your Facebook pictures.We are tagging the bodies now.
Correct grammar is Bob and I but most people use causal grammer and you and Bob is OK.
Yes. She found is correct, Bob and Bill found is correct so She, Bob and Bill found is correct.
Yes, as the object of a verb or a preposition: I saw Bob; I saw her; I saw Bob and her. Some people think "her and Bob" sounds better, but it is not any more correct. There is nothing wrong grammatically with the construction 'Bob and her' as the object of a verb. Whether it sounds better or worse than 'her and Bob' is a question of usage or taste, not of grammar.