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.
My friend and I both agreed that going to a party tonight would be a lot of fun, so the feeling was mutual.
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.
You and your friend applied at....
If for example somebody is a mutual friend of you and me, it means he is both my friend and your friend.
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."