If you use "with" it indicates there's a company of friends and you went with them. If you use "in" it indicates you are part of the company.
"went out in the company of your friends" is correct.
Yes, the sentence "Where you went is it correct" is not grammatically correct. It can be rephrased to "Is where you went correct?" for proper syntax.
No its wrong. Use "he went to sea alone"..
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct. Here are some examples:You went to the water park on Monday with your friend Joey.I went to the water park on Monday with my friends.
Yes, that sentence is correct grammatically.
Yes, that sentence is grammatically correct.
"I walked down the lane" and "I went to the store" are both grammatically correct. I'm not sure if I understand the question :/
The correct grammar usage here would be: He and I went to the movies last night.
I think so because you can split it in two: He went to the show or I went to the show.
No, the sentence is not correct grammatically. It should be "Mario and I went to the market" since "I" is the subject pronoun used when referring to oneself as the subject of the sentence.
No, the phrase "had went" is grammatically incorrect. The correct form is "had gone," using the past participle of "go" after the auxiliary verb "had."
Both are correct in different contexts. You and I is always used for the subject of a verb, for example: You and I are friends; You and I went swimming, and so forth.You and me is always used for the object of a verb or a preposition, for example: Daddy used to take you and me to the beach; Between you and me, there's something funny here-The correct term of that is you and I.for example: look at the differenceYou and I are going ice skating tomorrow.You and me are going ice skating tomorrow.You and I sounds better and is grammatically correct.