"Between you and her" (or her and you) is correct. The nominative "she" may never be the object of the preposition "between."
"She" is used in a sentence to refer to the person who carries out the action . Example: "She plays the Clarinet".
"Her" is the direct object as in "He likes her" or the indirect object as in "Give the music to her".
You would not say "Give it to she" or "He likes she". Neither would you say "between he and you" or " between we and they".
The subject pronouns are: I, you, he, she, it, we, they. They can all be used to denote who or what is doing the action.
The object pronouns are: me,you,him, her,it,us, them. These are the forms to use with prepositions such as "between"( remember your question?), to, for, by,with,under, over, next to and so on.
Please note that the pronouns "it" and "you" can be subject pronoun AND object pronoun.
The difference is that "accustomed to" is a correct usage while "accustomed with" is incorrect.
The correct usage of among is as a preposition applying to collective arrangements. Among means with each other or by the joint action. Between means a point of comparison. An example of use is, even among friends, the difference in music preference is noticeable.
The correct usage is:One ship sails on the water.Explanation:The reason why the correct usage is "on" is because the ship will sail on top of the water ie. on the water.
Sheila and I is the correct grammatical usage in a sentence.
The correct usage is "spies".
The difference is that the former is correct usage and the latter is not.
"Two of them have sent" is correct usage.
Correct usage of the word 'just?'
The difference is that "accustomed to" is a correct usage while "accustomed with" is incorrect.
The correct usage of among is as a preposition applying to collective arrangements. Among means with each other or by the joint action. Between means a point of comparison. An example of use is, even among friends, the difference in music preference is noticeable.
The correct usage is in Seventh Grade but to use this properly, you must out it in quotes. In "Seventh Grade" by Gary Soto,............
Either is correct usage, but the first word is spelled "It's."
Depending on what "it" is, "took it off the car" can be correct English usage.
It is not correct. The correct usage is: waiting to hear from you.
Yes it is correct.
The correct usage is:One ship sails on the water.Explanation:The reason why the correct usage is "on" is because the ship will sail on top of the water ie. on the water.
On the outskirts.