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No it's not correct grammar. You don't say "Myself is here." You say "I am here," so you would say "John and I are here."
Best: Contact either John or me.
"John has the towel" is correct.
Yes! "She is with me and John." You can test it out by using the sentence with just one of the persons at a time. For instance, "She is with me." is correct. Also, "She is with John." is correct. Therefore "She is with me and John" is also correct. (However it might sound more natural to say "She is with John and me")
Yes, it is correct.Example:"Here is John coming up the field."
No it's not correct grammar. You don't say "Myself is here." You say "I am here," so you would say "John and I are here."
John's coat is new . The above sentence is correct in grammar and spelling.
Best: Contact either John or me.
John's and my first cruise. Hope you enjoy the cruise!
"I confirm John and myself as participants" is correct. "Myself" is one of the "reflexive" pronouns, which should be used whenever an element of the predicate of a sentence represents the same person as an element of the subject of the same sentence. The easiest way to remember is: If you say the sentence again, but leave out "John", you would then say "I confirm myself as a participant." You wouldn't say "I confirm me as a participant."
Correct grammar is "She met with John and me" because singular, "She met with me" makes more sense then "She met with I"
John is better writer than I
You can check for correct grammar using tools like Grammarly or the grammar check feature in word processing programs like Microsoft Word. Additionally, you can also use online grammar checking websites like Ginger or ProWritingAid.
A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."
St John's Grammar School was created in 1958.
John Hampden Grammar School was created in 1893.
John Huehnergard has written: 'A grammar of Akkadian / by John Huehnergard' -- subject(s): Akkadian language, Grammar 'Key to a Grammar of Akkadian (Harvard Semitic Studies 46)' 'Key to a grammar of Akkadian' -- subject(s): Problems, exercises, Akkadian language, Grammar