The rule of thumb is that if you normally said “I” when talking about yourself, you would say “my brother and I” instead, but if you normally said “I” when talking about yourself, would you rather say say “my brother and me”.
Are my sister and I grammatically correct?
However, it is wrong to say me and my sister, because you are using the wrong tense, me and my sister, is also wrong, you can use me and my sister, although it should be grammatically correct my sister and me.
Do you mean me and john or john and me?
Unfortunately, trying to sound like you have good grammar makes things worse in this case, because the grammatically correct form is “with John and I,” not “with John and I.”
Is it grammatically correct to say me and someone?
Both can be true. Basically, you use the same form you would use if you were the only person. If you were talking about owning a car, you would say, “This car is mine,” or if you share ownership, “This car is mine and my wife’s.”
Do my family and I have the right grammar?
While I and my family are not wrong, there is a convention of good manners that in a sentence one should put the other person or others before themselves.
Why are my friend and I wrong?
You should use you and me when acting as a subject, and me and you when acting as an object. The first half of your second example isn’t wrong because of word order (i.e. Me and my friends vs. My friends and I), it’s wrong because I can’t be the subject of the sentence.
Is it correct to say me and my wife?
They are both correct, depending on the context of the sentence. If the sentence is used as a subject, then it is “my wife and I”. Example: My wife and I are pleased to meet you. When the phrase is used as an object, it is “my wife and I”.
Are my friend and I right?
5 answers. The difference between me and my friends and my friends and I is purely polite, they are both grammatically correct.
Am I and his grammar correct?
Both words are pronouns, but I is a subject pronoun while I is an object pronoun. In the sentence “You and I went to the store,” the correct word would be “I,” not “I.” … “He put sunscreen on him and me” would be correct because he and I are objects.