thats absolutely correct!!!
Not really. We have a mutual friend. We have a friend in common. Possibly You have a mutual friend with someone I know. You and Bob have a friend in common. Or You and Bob have a mutual friend.
The correct grammar for this sentence is: When did your friend come?
Here is an example sentence with the word "mutual":Our mutual friend Selena had recently moved to Arizona, do you want to visit her with me?
The correct sentence is: Me and my best friend are going on a exctotic trip to hawaii
well the correct way is whom but everyone says who.
You are looking for your best friend.
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The compound sentence "I went to the store, and then I visited my friend" contains correct punctuation.
My friend and I both agreed that going to a party tonight would be a lot of fun, so the feeling was mutual.
You and your friend applied at....
Yes, it is correct, but rather literary, not to say old-fashioned in today's idiomatic English. In normal speech, the phrase is "You want him to be your friend" or "you want to be friends with him."
If for example somebody is a mutual friend of you and me, it means he is both my friend and your friend.