Stop flinging your corn at your brother!
What the Americans call corn, we British call sweetcorn.
The corn fields are growing nicely.
He spoke too soon. A sudden plague of locusts devoured his entire field of corn.
It depends on the sentence in which you are using it in. Here are some examples of each:'Give my brother and me the corn flakes on the counter.''My brother and I are going camping without corn flakes.'The trick to use each properly is to eliminate the 'my brother and' and just say the sentence with just 'I' or 'me' in the sentence. Here are the repeated sentences without 'my brother and':'Give me the corn flakes on the counter.''I am going camping without corn flakes.'(The reason 'are' was changed to 'am' in the second sentence was because 'are' is plural, and was referring to you and your brother, while 'am' is only referring to you.)As long as the sentence makes sense, as shown in these two sentences, 'my brother and me' or 'my brother and I'are both acceptable wordings.
a corn cob pipe
There's a guy dressed as a corn dog in the music video hot and coldof course that might be it
ammocicilan
I have never found an official answer to this but my own speculation has lead me to believe that "Cracking corn" is probably a euphemism for flatulence. (Imagine the sound of grinding rock hard dried corn kernels)
Corn bread is made with flour mixed with milled corn.
The corn on his toe had got really bad. The corn harvested this year has been the best for many years.
The singular nouns in the sentence are:bushelmarketNote: The noun 'corn' is an uncountable noun. A partitive noun (also called a noun counter) is a noun used to count or quantify an uncountable noun, such as six ears of corn, a kernelof corn, a bushel of corn, etc.
What Betty wants is to harvest the corn.The noun clause is What Betty wants, the subject of the sentence.
I do not usually eat corn, but in this case I will.
There can be several pronouns for corn. It depends upon its use in a sentence. The CORN (noun) is fresh. IT (pronoun) is fresh. Do you want to eat CORN (noun)? Do you want to eat SOME (pronoun)?
Neither. It is a conjunction, because it connects the clause "the farmer harvested the corn" to the actual sentence, which is "he sold it as ensilage."
The bird cawed when the farmers shucked the corn.
Corn is corny. XP
Sentence: The farmer scattered corn for the chickens.
Corn grew quickly because the soil was fertile.
Susan shucked the corn and put the husks in the garbage.